“That’s why you knew about all the shapeshifters in town, because they came to you for help.”
He nodded. “I have been known, since my accident, to hunt down rogue lycanthropes and not inform the authorities. A few bad apples don’t have to spoil the entire barrel.”
I looked at him and tried to think. “People thought your near-death experience had mellowed you, but you contracted lycanthropy, that’s why you stopped being a bounty hunter.”
“It seemed wrong to hunt other unfortunates,” he said. “People who had less to do with the accident that made them what they were than I did. At least I was hunting the werewolf that almost killed me. I was trying to hurt it. Most people who survive an attack are just innocents.”
“I know that,” I said, voice soft, because knowing Chimera was Orlando King didn’t help solve the mystery for me; it deepened it. I was more confused than when I walked in the damn building.
“But my change of heart, as you put it, came later. Wolf lycanthropy showed up in my bloodstream within forty-eight hours of my attack. I decided I would take out as many monsters as I could and let them take me out before the first full moon.” He stared past me, eyes distant with remembering. “I took the most dangerous jobs I could find, until I ended up trying to kill an entire tribe of weresnakes in the depths of the Amazon basin.” He looked at the small dark man still at his side. “I decided that dozens of any animal would surely kill me, and if not, then at the first full moon I would be in an area devoid of any human except the people I’d come to kill.”
“Logical, I guess,” I said, because it seemed appropriate to say something.
His gaze flicked to me. “I had planned my death, Ms. Blake, but every animal I tried to kill just wasn’t up to killing me. By the time I had my first full moon I’d been infected by a great many forms of predatory lycanthropy. And on that first moon, I changed into what Abuta and his people are, then a wolf, then a bear, then a leopard, then a lion, so forth, and so on.” He was looking at Abuta, and his face held some of the religious fervor that the smaller man seemed to emanate. “They thought I was a god because I could take so many forms. They worshipped me, and they sent half their tribe to accompany me back to civilization.” He laughed then. It was abrupt and unpleasant. Something about that laugh raised the hairs on my arms.
“You’ve killed all but three of them, Anita. I may call you Anita, mightn’t I?”
I nodded, almost afraid to speak, because emotions were chasing across King’s face, emotions that didn’t match his calm words, as if he were feeling things that he wasn’t aware of. It was like watching a badly dubbed film, except it was body actions that were out of step, not the words.
A prickling rush of energy came off him like heat, and his eyes turned. One pale greenish leopard, one wolf amber. It wasn’t just the colors of the irises that didn’t match, it was the shape of the pupils; the entire set of each eye socket was slightly different from the other. I hadn’t noticed the bone structure shifting; it had been that fast.
A smile curled his lips. The entire expression of face, body, everything changed, and it wasn’t shapeshifting; it was as if another person just settled into King’s skin. Chimera’s voice was slightly southern, thick and round-voweled. It was the voice I’d heard over the loudspeaker when they tried to ambush us in the club. “Poor Orlando, he just can’t cope anymore. He hates what he’s become.”
I think I stopped breathing for a few heartbeats, which made my next breath harsh. I’d dealt with sociopaths, pychopaths, serial killers, crazies of all ilk, but this was my first multiple personality.
Chimera jerked at the tight tie, tore it off, unbuttoned the collar, rotated his neck, and smiled. “There, that’s much better, don’t you agree?”
My voice came out breathy. “Always good to be comfortable.”
He stepped closer to me, and I backed up, bumping into Zeke. Chimera stepped in very close, almost touching and sniffed just above the skin of my face. This close his power rode over me like thousands of ants biting along my skin.
“You smell of fear, Anita. I didn’t think a little eye shift would spook you.”
I licked my lips, staring into those mismatched eyes from inches away. “The eyes don’t bother me.”
“Then what does?” he asked, still hovering over me.
I licked my lips again and didn’t know what to say. Or rather, couldn’t think of a safe thing to say. I thought of several smart alec remarks, but you should humor crazy people when you’re at their mercy; it’s a rule. Of course, I also had a rule never to put myself at the mercy of sadistic serial killers suffering from multiple personality disorder. I hoped we all lived to regret my breaking that rule. Truly insane people are often unpredictable and hard to negotiate with.
“I’m waiting for an answer,” he said in a sing-song voice.
I just couldn’t think of a good lie, so I tried mild truth. “The fact that I was talking to Orlando King and now I’m not, but it’s the same body talking at me.”
He laughed and stepped back. Then he went very still, as if he were listening to things I couldn’t hear. Was it the rescue, this soon? It couldn’t be. He looked down at me, smiling that unpleasant smile and ran his hands down his own body. “I make better use of the body than Orlando does.”
Okeydokey, things were not improving. I looked up at Zeke and tried to tell him with my eyes that he should have told me that Chimera was this crazy.
Chimera grabbed my wrist, jerked me close. I’d been so busy trying to get eye contact with Zeke that I hadn’t even seen it coming. “I was always inside Orlando. I was that part of him that allowed him to slaughter other human beings and feel nothing but hatred. He rarely took a shifter in animal form. It was safer in human form, and Orlando was a very big believer in safety, at least for himself.” He drew me against his body using my wrist like a handle. He wasn’t hurting me, but the strength in his grip was like a promise, a threat. He could have crushed my wrist and we both knew it.
“King had a reputation for getting the job done,” I said.
“The job was to kill other people, women as well as men. Then he’d cut off their heads, burn the bodies, make sure they weren’t coming back. I was the part of him that enjoyed the work, and when he became what he hated most in the world, I protected him from himself.”
“How?” I asked, softly.
“By doing the things he was too weak to do himself, but still wanted done.”
“Like what?” I asked. Rescue was coming; it was just a matter of stalling until help arrived. It had been the original plan, and the fact that Chimera was Orlando King and crazier than a June beetle on crack didn’t really change the plan. Just keep him talking. All men love to talk about themselves, even the ones who are completely buggers. Being insane doesn’t change that, or at least it never had before. It was just the multiple personality stuff that was freaking me out. If I treated Chimera like any other homicidal maniac, we’d be fine. At least that’s what I kept telling myself. My pulse stayed too fast, my chest stayed tight, the fear stayed high; I don’t think I believed myself.
“You want to know how I helped Orlando?” he asked.
I nodded “Yeah.”
“You really want to know what I’ve done for him?”
I nodded again, but I was beginning not to like the way he kept phrasing things.
He smiled, and just the smile promised painful, unpleasant things. “You know what they say. Talk is cheap. Let me show you, Anita, let me show you what I’ve done.” With that he reached behind him to the doorknob, turned it, and pulled me into the room beyond.
65
THE ROOM WAS black, utterly black, like being flung into blindness, nothingness, like a cave. Chimera released my arm. It was like being cut adrift, lost in the blackness. I stumbled in the darkness. I reached out blindly to catch myself and touched something. I grabbed at it, trying to hold on to something, anything. Then the flesh gave under my hand, and I realized it was hum
an and not where it should have been. It was too high up to be someone’s calf. I jerked back, and something else brushed my back. I let out a little squeal, hands out, stumbling in the dark, and smacked into something else that swung as I hit it. I realized whatever it was, was hanging from the ceiling. I moved away from it and ran face first into the next surprise. The solid smack of flesh on flesh let me know it was a body. The scream let me know it was still alive. I’d hit hard enough that the man swung into me again, and I tried to back away and bumped into another one. That one didn’t make any noise. I kept my hands out in front of me and fought to get free of them, but my hand kept touching bodies and body parts—hips, thighs, groins, buttocks. I moved faster, trying to force my way out of the forest of hanging bodies, but moving fast made them start to swing and crash into me. Screams came out of the dark, as if I’d started them all bumping into each other. Men screaming in the dark; by the sound of the voices I knew there were no women. One body hit me hard enough that I fell, and dangling feet brushed against me. I tried to crawl away from them, but they were everywhere, touching me, brushing me, some struggling against my back. I lay down on the floor trying to get away, to get clear, swatting at them with my hands, frantic not to be touched. I crawled on my back, using my feet and hands to try and get under them, but their heights were all different, and I couldn’t get free of them.
I felt a scream building in my gut and knew if I screamed once I’d just keep on. My hand landed in a pool of something warm and liquid, and it stopped me. Even in the dark I knew what blood felt like. This was probably the point where most people would have definitely started screaming, but somehow the feel of the blood calmed me. I knew about blood and letting it out of a man until he died. I pressed my hand into that still-warm pool and it steadied me.
I lay back on the floor with my hand in blood and my head resting in God knows what and relearned how to breathe. If I lay very still and didn’t try and move, the feet didn’t touch me, nothing touched me. So I lay in the dark and closed my eyes and tried to use my other senses, because my eyes were useless. I’ve got pretty good night vision, but even a cat needs some light, and there was nothing, nothing but the darkness.
The chains creaked as the bodies still swung heavily above me. There were tiny air currents. A warm drop hit my cheek. All the movement had started fresh bleeding from someone. I kept my eyes closed and forced myself to take steady, even breaths. One man was screaming, “God, God, God!” over and over again, as fast as he could draw breath. He’d lost it, and I didn’t blame him. I’d come damn close myself, and I wasn’t hanging nude from the ceiling, bleeding.
Chimera’s voice came out of the darkness. “Shut up, shut the fuck up!”
The man stopped screaming almost instantly, but his breath came in whimpers, as if he had to make some sound.
“Anita,” Chimera said. “Anita, where are you?”
Even he couldn’t see in the pitch blackness, and the smell of blood, sweat, and flesh masked my odor apparently. Great, he didn’t know where I was. I wished I could think of something good to do with that information. But I just lay in the dark on the foul floor, my hand in the pool of cooling blood, another drop of fresh, warm blood hitting my cheek, and did nothing. All I had to do was stall until the cavalry arrived. I’d tried talking to Chimera and that hadn’t worked so well. I’d try silence.
“Anita, Anita, answer me.”
I didn’t answer. If he wanted to find me he could damn well turn on the light. I thought I wanted some light. But then I thought maybe I didn’t really want to see what hung above me in this room. Maybe it would be one of those sights that blasts the mind, one you never really recover from. But I badly wanted to see something, almost anything. I lay in the dark, the way I used to huddle under the sheets as a child, afraid of the dark, afraid of what I could not see.
“Answer me, Anita!” He screamed it this time, voice harsh.
A male voice from above me. “Answer him if you can, you don’t want him angry with you.”
Another man gave a sound like a choking laugh. It sounded thick, as if there were blood in his mouth and throat.
The dark was suddenly full of voices saying, “Answer him, answer him.” It was like the wind had found a voice and was giving me instructions in the dark.
Another drop of blood fell on my cheek and began to slide slowly down my skin. I didn’t wipe it off. I didn’t move. I was afraid any movement would let Chimera know where I was, and I didn’t want that.
“Shut up!” Chimera yelled, and I heard him move farther into the room. The voices above me fell silent. But I could still feel them hanging there like weight above me, like a rock ceiling pressing down on me. I took a deep breath, let it out slowly. My claustrophobia was trying to scream in my head that I couldn’t breathe, but it was a lie. The dark did not have weight to it; that was the fear talking. If Chimera wanted to let me lie in the dark for the next hour until help arrived, I’d let him. I would not panic. It wouldn’t help anything for me to start crawling frantically across the floor with feet brushing my back. If I did that, I would start screaming, and I wouldn’t stop for a long, long time.
The blood oozed along my neck into my hair, and I kept my eyes closed and concentrated on breathing shallow, quiet.
“Answer me, Anita, or I will start cutting on the men hanging above you,” Chimera said. His voice was closer, but not too close. He was still outside the forest of hanging bodies.
I still didn’t answer.
“You don’t believe me? Let me prove it to you.”
A man screamed, high, piteous, hopeless.
“Don’t,” I said.
“Don’t what?”
“Don’t hurt them.”
“They’re nothing to you, not your animal, not your friend. Why do you care?”
“Orlando King knows the answer to your question.”
“I’m asking you,” Chimera said.
“You already know the answer,” I said.
“No, no! Orlando knows the answer. I don’t. I don’t understand. Why do you care about strangers?” The other man screamed again.
“Stop it, Chimera.”
“Or what?” he asked. “What will you do if I don’t stop? What will you do if I stand here in the dark and cut pieces off this man? How will you stop me?”
The man was shrieking, “No, don’t, not that, nooo!” The scream fell off, which meant the man was either dead, or he’d fainted. I hoped he’d fainted, but either way I couldn’t do much about it.
“Can you taste the fear, Anita? Roll it on your tongue like the strong spice it is.”
Right then my mouth was so dry I couldn’t have tasted a damn thing. But I could sense their fear, smell it on them. All of them were afraid now, fresh terror, pouring out of their skin. “It’s easy to scare people in the dark, Chimera. Everybody’s afraid of the dark.”
“Even you?”
I avoided the question. “I was told if I came down here that you’d let Cherry and Micah go.”
“I did tell Zeke that.”
And in that moment I knew he had no intention of letting them go. It shouldn’t have surprised me, but it did. Had I really expected fair dealings from him? Maybe. It offended some part of me to know that he wasn’t going to do what he’d said. It meant all deals were off. I’d gone from having something to bargain with, to nothing. Just on a whim, he could kill Cherry and Micah before help arrived. My pulse was speeding up again, and I fought to keep my breathing steady. I took my hand out of the cooling pool of blood. I might as well move. He’d locate me soon through my voice.
I laid my hands on my stomach and tried to think of what I could do, unarmed, against a man who outweighed me by more than a hundred pounds and was strong enough to break through brick walls. Nothing useful came to mind. Maybe violence wasn’t the way to stall. What did that leave? Sex? Sweet reason? Witty repartee? Dear God, a little help here.
“You don’t feel the need to talk, do you?” he asked, v
oice calmer than it had been, more “normal.”
“Not unless I have something to say.”
“That’s unusual in a woman. Most of them can’t stand the thought of silence. They talk and talk and talk.” He was sounding calmer. In fact, he sounded like we should have been sitting across a table in some nice restaurant on a blind date. Since we were in a pitch-black torture room with blood on the floor, the matter-of-fact voice was more frightening than the ranting had been. He was supposed to rant and rave, but calm small talk, that was really crazy.
His voice got calmer, but it never sounded exactly like Orlando King’s. It was as if there was another voice coming out of him, another personality, maybe. I didn’t know, and I didn’t care. If it kept him from cutting people up, then yea.
“Would you like to see your leopard now?” the calm voice asked.
“Yes.”
The lights exploded across my vision, and I was as blind with the brilliance as I had been with the dark. I put a hand over my eyes to shield them, then slowly lowered it as my spotty vision cleared.
I was staring up at a pair of feet, legs. My gaze went up the line of the man’s body to find fresh claw marks on his buttocks and thighs. Another drop of blood trailed from his bare foot to land on my hand. My gaze went slowly to the next pair of legs, and the next, and the next . . . Dozens of men hung like obscene ornaments. For the first time I let myself wonder, was Micah hanging somewhere in the forest of bodies?
“Do you want to stand up or are you enjoying the view from there?” The calm voice spoke from only about two feet away from me. It made me jump badly. I rolled my head back to see Chimera standing two hanging men away from me.
“I’ll stand, if you don’t mind.”
“Allow me to help you.” He pushed one of the hanging men to the side like you’d move a drape, like the pale blue eyes weren’t open, staring, like the man didn’t shudder as Chimera touched him.
Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10 Page 258