Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10

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Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10 Page 46

by Laurell Hamilton


  “Very good, Kevin, very good.” Condescending is also good.

  He coughed to clear his throat. “What do you want?”

  “I want you to come down to St. Louis University Hospital. Stephen and Nathaniel have been hurt. I want you to guard them for me.”

  “Nathaniel, he’s one of the wereleopards.”

  “That’s right.”

  “Sylvie’s forbidden us to help the wereleopards.”

  “Is Sylvie your lupa?” Questions are great, but only if you know the answers. If you ask questions and the answers surprise you, you look silly. Hard to be threatening when you look ill-informed.

  He was quiet for a second. “No.”

  “Who is?”

  I heard him swallow. “You are.”

  “Do I outrank her?”

  “You know you do.”

  “Then get your butt down here, and do what I ask.”

  “Sylvie will hurt me, lupa. She really will.”

  “I’ll see that she doesn’t.”

  “You’re just Richard’s human girlfriend. You can’t fight Sylvie, not and live.”

  “You’re right, Kevin. I can’t fight Sylvie, but I can kill her.”

  “What do you mean?”

  “If she hurts you for helping me, I’ll kill her.”

  “You can’t mean that.”

  I sighed. “Look, Kevin, I’ve met Sylvie. Trust me when I say that I could point a gun at her head and pull the trigger. I can and will kill Sylvie if she forces me to. No jokes, no bluffs, no games.” I listened to my voice as I said it. I sounded tired, almost bored, and so serious it was almost frightening.

  “All right, I’ll do it, but if you let me down she may kill me.”

  “You have my protection, Kevin, and I know what that means in the pack.”

  “It means I have to acknowledge you as dominant to me,” he said.

  “It also means that if anyone challenges you, I can help you fight your battles. Seems like a fair trade.”

  Silence filled the phone lines again. His breathing had slowed, deepened. “Promise me you won’t get me killed.”

  “I can’t promise that, Kevin, but I can promise that if Sylvie kills you, I’ll kill her for you.”

  Silence, shorter this time. “I believe you would. I’ll be at the hospital in forty minutes or less.”

  “Thanks, I’ll be waiting.”

  I hung up and made the other two calls. They both agreed to come down. I’d drawn a line in the sand with Sylvie on one side and me on the other. She wasn’t going to like it, not one little bit. Couldn’t blame her. If our places were reversed, I’d have been pissed. But she should have left Richard alone. Irving had said it was like Richard was wounded, like the heart had gone out of him. I’d helped put that wound there. I’d cut his heart into tiny little pieces and danced on them. Not deliberately. My intentions were good, but you know what they say about good intentions.

  I couldn’t love Richard, but I could kill for him. Killing was the more practical of the two gifts. And lately I’d become very, very practical.

  6

  SERGEANT RUDOLPH STORR showed up before the baby-sitting werewolves could arrive. I’d called him myself. He was the man in charge of the Regional Preternatural Investigation Team, RPIT, or RIP. A lot of people call us RIP, for Rest in Peace. Hey, at least they know who we are.

  Dolph is six foot eight, built like a pro-wrestler, but it isn’t just physical size that makes him impressive. He’d taken a squad that had been meant as a joke to appease the liberals and made it work. RPIT had solved more preternatural crimes in the last three years than any other police unit. Including the FBI. Dolph had even been invited up to lecture at Quantico. Not bad for someone who’d been given his command as a punishment. Dolph wasn’t exactly an optimist, few cops are, but give him lemons and he made damn fine lemonade.

  He closed the door behind him and stared down at me. “The doctor said my detective was in here. I just see you.”

  “I never said I was a detective. I said I was with the squad. They assumed the rest.”

  He shook his head. His black hair actually hid the tops of his ears. He was overdue for a haircut. “If you were playing cop, why didn’t you yell at the uniform that was supposed to be on this door?”

  I smiled up at him. “I thought I’d leave that to you. I assume he knows that he was a bad boy.”

  “I took care of it,” Dolph said.

  He stayed standing at the door. I stayed sitting in my chair. I’d actually managed not to pull my gun on him. I was happy about that. He was staring at me hard enough to hurt without flashing a gun at him.

  “What’s going on, Anita?”

  “You know everything I know,” I said.

  “How did you happen to be Johnny-on-the-spot?”

  “Stephen called me.”

  “Tell me,” he said.

  I told him. I even put in the part about the pimping. I wanted that stopped. The cops are pretty good at stopping crime, if you tell the truth. I left out a few things, like me having killed the wereleopards’ old alpha. It was the only thing I left out. For me, it was almost the same as being honest.

  Dolph blinked at me and took it all down in his trusty notebook. “Are you saying that our victim allowed someone to do this to him?”

  I shook my head. “I don’t think it’s that simple. I think he went there knowing they’d chain him up. He knew there’d be sex and pain, but I don’t think he knew they’d come this close to killing him. The doctors actually had to give him blood. His body was going into shock faster than it could fix itself.”

  “I’ve heard of wereanimals healing from worse wounds than this,” Dolph said.

  I shrugged. “Some people heal better than others even among the shapeshifters. Nathaniel is pretty low in the power structure, so I’m told. Maybe part of being weak is not healing as well.” I spread my hands wide. “I don’t know.”

  Dolph searched back through his notes. “Someone dropped him off at the emergency entrance wrapped in a sheet. No one saw anything. He just appeared.”

  “No one ever sees anything, Dolph. Isn’t that the rule?”

  That earned me a small smile. It was nice to see the smile. Dolph wasn’t too happy with me lately. He’d only recently found out that I was dating the Master of the City. He didn’t like it. He didn’t trust anyone that socialized with the monsters. Couldn’t blame him.

  “Yeah, that’s the rule. Are you telling me everything you know about this, Anita?”

  I raised a hand in a scout’s salute. “Would I lie to you?”

  “If it suited your purpose, yes.”

  We stared at each other. The silence grew thick enough to walk on. I let it sit there. If Dolph thought I was going to break first, he was wrong. The strain between us wasn’t this case. It was his disapproval of my choice of dates. His disappointment in me was always there now. Pressing, weighted, waiting for me to apologize or say, shucks, just kidding. The fact that I was dating a vampire made him trust me less. I understood. Two months ago, even less, and I’d have felt the same way. But here I was dating who, and what, I was dating. Dolph and I, both, had to deal with it.

  And yet, he was my friend, and I respected him. I even agreed with him, but if I could ever get out of this damn hospital, I had a date with Jean-Claude tonight. Regardless of my doubts about Richard, morals in general, and the walking dead, I wanted the date. The thought of Jean-Claude waiting for me made my body tight and warm. Embarrassing, but true. I don’t think anything short of giving up Jean-Claude would have satisfied Dolph. I wasn’t sure that was an option anymore for a lot of reasons. So I sat and looked at Dolph. He stared back. The silence grew thicker with each tick of the clock.

  A knock on the door saved us. The officer, now attentively on the door, whispered something to Dolph. Dolph nodded and closed the door. The look he gave me was even less friendly, if that was possible.

  “Officer Wayne says that there are three relatives of S
tephen’s out here. He also says that if they’re all relatives, he’ll eat his gun.”

  “Tell him to pucker up,” I said. “They’re fellow pack members. Werewolves consider that closer than family.”

  “But legally it’s not family,” Dolph said.

  “How many of your men you want to lose when the next shapeshifter comes through that door?”

  “We can shoot them just as good as you can, Anita.”

  “But you still have to give them a warning before you shoot them, don’t you? You still have to treat them like people instead of monsters or you end up in front of the review board.”

  “Witnesses say you gave Zane, no last name, a warning.”

  “I was feeling generous.”

  “You were shooting him in front of witnesses. That always makes you generous.”

  We went back to staring at each other. Maybe it wasn’t just dating a vampire. Maybe it was the fact that Dolph was the ultimate cop and he was beginning to suspect that I was killing people, murdering people. People who hurt me or threatened me did have a tendency to vanish. Not many, but enough. And less than two months ago I’d killed two people where the bodies couldn’t be hidden. Self-defense both times. Never saw the inside of a courtroom. Both assassins with records longer than I was tall. The woman’s fingerprints had been the answer to several political killings that Interpol had lying around. Big-time bad guys that no one really mourned, at least not the cops.

  But it fed Dolph’s suspicions. Hell, it did everything but confirm them.

  “Why’d you recommend me to Pete McKinnon, Dolph?”

  He didn’t answer for so long, I thought he wasn’t going to, but finally he said, “Because you’re the best at what you do, Anita. I may not always approve of your methods, but you help save lives, put away the bad guys. You’re better on a murder scene than some of the detectives on my squad.”

  For Dolph, this was a speech. I opened my mouth, closed it, then said, “Thanks, Dolph. Coming from you, that’s a big compliment.”

  “You just spend too much time with the damn monsters, Anita. I don’t mean who you date. I mean all of it. You’ve played by their rules so long, sometimes you forget what it’s like to be normal.”

  I smiled. “I raise the dead for a living, Dolph. I’ve never been normal.”

  He shook his head. “Don’t purposely misunderstand what I’m saying, Anita. It’s not the fur or the fangs that make you a monster, not always. Sometimes, it’s just where you draw the line.”

  “The fact that I play with monsters is what makes me valuable to you, Dolph. If I played it straight, I wouldn’t be as good helping you solve preternatural crimes.”

  “Yeah, sometimes I wonder if I’d left you alone, not gotten you to consult with us, if you’d be…softer.”

  I frowned at him. “Are you saying you blame yourself for what I’ve become?” I tried to laugh it off, but his face stopped me.

  “How often did you go to the monsters on one of my cases? How often did you have to make bargains with them to help put away a bad guy? If I’d left you alone…”

  I stood up. I reached out to him, then let my hand fall back without touching him. “I’m not your daughter, Dolph. You’re not my keeper. I help the police because I like it. I’m good at it. And who else you gonna call?”

  He nodded. “Yeah, who else? The shifters outside can come in and…visit the patients.”

  “Thanks, Dolph.”

  He took in a long breath and let it out in a big rush of air. “I saw the window that your friend Stephen got shoved through. If he’d been human, he’d be dead. It’s just luck that no civilians were killed.”

  I shook my head. “I think Zane was being careful of the humans, at least. With the strength he has, it would have been easier to kill than to maim.”

  “Why would he have cared?”

  “Because he’s in jail, and he gets a bail hearing.”

  “They won’t let him out,” Dolph said.

  “He didn’t kill anyone, Dolph. Since when haven’t you seen someone not get bail for assault and battery?”

  “You think like a cop, Anita. It’s what makes you good.”

  “I think like a cop and like a monster. That’s what makes me good.”

  He nodded, closed his notebook and slipped it into an inner pocket of his jacket. “Yeah, that’s what makes you good.” He left without another word. He sent in the three werewolves and closed the door.

  Kevin was tall, dark, scruffy and smelled like cigarettes. Lorraine was neat and prim like a second-grade schoolteacher. She smelled of White Linen perfume and blinked nervously at me. Teddy, his preference not mine, weighed around three hundred pounds, most of it muscle. He’d buzzed his hair down to a fine dark prickle, and his head looked too small for his massive body. The men looked scary, but it was Lorraine’s handshake that left power vibrating down my skin. She looked like a scared rabbit and had enough power to be the big bad wolf.

  Within twenty minutes I was free to leave. The mismatched trio of werewolves had divided the shifts so that one of them would be with the boys at all times. Did I trust the new wolves to guard them? Yeah. Because if they abandoned their posts and let Stephen get killed, I really would kill them. If they tried their best and were simply not strong enough, fine, but if they just gave up…I’d given Stephen, and now, Nathaniel, my protection. I wasn’t kidding. I made sure that all of them knew that.

  Kevin said it best, “If Sylvie shows up, we’ll send her to you.”

  “You do that.”

  He shook his head, playing with an unlit cigarette. I’d told him he couldn’t smoke it, but even touching it seemed to comfort him. “You’ve pissed in her pond. I hope you can clean it up.”

  I smiled. “Eloquent, Kevin, very eloquent.”

  “Eloquent or not, Sylvie is going to bust your ass if she can.”

  The smile widened. I couldn’t help it. “Let me worry about my own ass. My job is to keep your ass out of the sling, not mine.”

  The three werewolves looked at me. There was something on all their faces, almost the same expression, but I couldn’t read it. “Being lupa is more than just fighting for dominance,” said Lorraine in a small voice.

  “I know that,” I said.

  “Do you?” she asked, and there was something childlike in the question.

  “I think so.”

  “You kill us if we fail you,” Kevin said, “but will you die for us? Will you risk the same price you ask us to pay?”

  I liked Kevin better when he wasn’t being eloquent. I stared at these three strangers. People I’d just met. Would I risk my life for them? Could I ask them to risk their lives for me if I wasn’t willing to return the favor?

  I looked at them, really looked at them. Lorraine’s small hands clutching her purse so tightly her hands shook. Teddy, who stared at me with calm, accepting eyes, but there was a challenge in them, an intelligence that you might miss if you just looked at the body. Kevin, who looked like he should be in an alley looking for a fix, or in a bar drinking up his share of whiskey. There was something underneath the cynicism. It was fear. Fear that I’d be like all the rest. A user who didn’t give a damn about them. Raina had been that, and now Sylvie. The pack was supposed to be their refuge, their protection, not the thing they feared most.

  Their warm, electric power filled the room, flowed out of them, dancing over my body. They were nervous, scared. Strong emotions made most shapeshifters leak power. If you were sensitive to it, you’d feel it. I’d felt it a lot over the years. This time was different somehow. I didn’t just sense the power, my body reacted to it. Not merely a shivering of skin, a line of goose bumps, but something deeper. It was almost sexual, but that wasn’t it either. It was as if the power had found a part of me, caressed a part of me, that I never knew was there.

  Their power filled me, touched something, and I felt it, whatever it was, open up like a switch being thrown. A rush of warm energy welled up inside of my body and s
pread out through my skin, as if every pore of my body was emitting a warm line of air. It brought a soft gasp to my throat. I knew the taste of the power, and it wasn’t Jean-Claude. It was Richard. Somehow, I’d tapped into Richard’s power. I wondered if he felt it all the way out of state, studying for his degree.

  Six weeks ago to save both their lives, I’d let Jean-Claude bind the three of us to each other. They were dying, and I couldn’t let them go. Richard had invaded my dreams by accident, but mostly Jean-Claude had kept us apart because anything else was too painful. This was the first time I’d felt Richard’s power since then. The first time I knew for certain that the tie was still there, still strong. Magic is like that. Even hate can’t kill it.

  I suddenly had the words, words I couldn’t have known. “I am lupa, I am the all-mother, I am your guardian, your refuge, your peace. I will stand with you against all harm. Your enemies are my enemies. I share blood and flesh with you. We are lukoi, we are pack.”

  The warmth cut off abruptly. I staggered. Only Teddy’s hand kept me from falling to the floor. “Are you all right?” he asked in a voice as deep and impressive as the rest of him.

  I nodded. “I’m fine, I’m fine.” As soon as I could, I stepped back. Richard had felt the pull hundreds of miles away, and he’d cut me off. He’d slammed the door shut without knowing what I was doing, or why. A rush of rage danced down inside my head like a silent scream. He was so angry.

  We were both bound to Jean-Claude. I was his human servant and Richard was his wolf. It was a painful intimacy.

  “You aren’t lukoi,” Lorraine said. “You aren’t a shapeshifter. How did you do that?”

  I smiled. “Trade secret.” Truth was, I didn’t know. I’d have to ask Jean-Claude tonight. I hoped he could explain it. He was only the third master vampire in their long history to have bound both a mortal and a shapeshifter into a single bond. I suspected strongly that there wasn’t a manual, and that Jean-Claude winged it more often than I wanted to know.

  Teddy went down on his knees. “You are lupa.” The other two followed him. They abased themselves like good little submissive wolves, though Kevin didn’t like it, and neither did I. But I wasn’t sure how much was form and how much was necessary. I wanted them submissive because I didn’t want to have to fight anybody, or kill anybody. So I let them crawl on the floor and run their hands along my legs, and sniff my skin like dogs. Which is when the nurse came in.

 

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