Blood Sisters
Page 31
We’re each on our own now, she thought, shutting the window and turning on the air-conditioner.
But think of me sometimes, Weyland, thinking of you.
THIS TOWN AIN’T BIG ENOUGH
Tanya Huff
Tanya Huff lives in rural Ontario and loves country life. A prolific author, her work includes many short stories, five fantasy series, and a science fiction series. One of these, her Blood Books series, featuring detective Vicki Nelson, was adapted for television under the title Blood Ties. A follow-up to the Blood Books, the three Smoke Books, featured Tony Foster as the main character. Her degree in Radio and Television Arts proved handy since Tony works on a show about a vampire detective. Her most recent novel, The Future Falls, was published in 2014. When not writing, she practices her guitar and spends too much time online. Her blog is andpuff.livejournal.com.
“This Town Ain’t Big Enough” is a Vicki Nelson story. Its mix of detection, the supernatural, a strong female protagonist, and a smattering of romance that might be called “urban fantasy” these days, but the universe of the Blood Books predates that subgenre by a decade …
“Ow! Vicki, be careful!”
“Sorry. Sometimes I forget how sharp they are.”
“Terrific.” He wove his fingers through her hair and pulled just hard enough to make his point. “Don’t.”
“Don’t what?” She grinned up at him, teeth gleaming ivory in the moonlight spilling across the bed. “Don’t forget or don’t—”
The sudden demand of the telephone for attention buried the last of her question.
Detective-Sergeant Michael Celluci sighed. “Hold that thought,” he said, rolled over, and reached for the phone. “Celluci.”
“Fifty-two division just called. They’ve found a body down at Richmond and Peter they think we might want to have a look at.”
“Dave, it’s …” He squinted at the clock. “… one twenty-nine in the a.m. and I’m off duty.”
On the other end of the line, his partner, theoretically off duty as well, refused to take the hint. “Ask me who the stiff is?”
Celluci sighed again. “Who’s the stiff?”
“Mac Eisler.”
“Shit.”
“Funny, that’s exactly what I said.” Nothing in Dave Graham’s voice indicated he appreciated the joke. “I’ll be there in ten.”
“Make it fifteen.”
“You in the middle of something?”
Celluci watched as Vicki sat up and glared at him. “I was.”
“Welcome to the wonderful world of law enforcement.”
Vicki’s hand shot out and caught Celluci’s wrist before he could heave the phone across the room. “Who’s Mac Eisler?” she asked as, scowling, he dropped the receiver back in its cradle and swung his legs off the bed.
“You heard that?”
“I can hear the beating of your heart, the movement of your blood, the song of your life.” She scratched the back of her leg with one bare foot. “I should think I can overhear a lousy phone conversation.”
“Eisler’s a pimp.” Celluci reached for the light switch, changed his mind, and began pulling on his clothes. Given the full moon riding just outside the window, it wasn’t exactly dark and given Vicki’s sensitivity to bright light, not to mention her temper, he figured it was safer to cope. “We’re pretty sure he offed one of his girls a couple weeks ago.”
Vicki scooped her shirt up off the floor. “Irene Macdonald?”
“What? You overheard that too?”
“I get around. How sure’s pretty sure?”
“Personally positive. But we had nothing solid to hold him on.” “And now he’s dead.” Skimming her jeans up over her hips, she dipped her brows in a parody of deep thought. “Golly, I wonder if there’s a connection.”
“Golly yourself,” Celluci snarled. “You’re not coming with me.”
“Did I ask?”
“I recognized the tone of voice. I know you, Vicki. I knew you when you were a cop, I knew you when you were a P.I. and I don’t care how much you’ve changed physically, I know you now you’re a … a …”
“Vampire.” Her pale eyes seemed more silver than gray. “You can say it, Mike. It won’t hurt my feelings. Bloodsucker. Nightwalker. Creature of Darkness.”
“Pain in the butt.” Carefully avoiding her gaze, he shrugged into his shoulder holster and slipped a jacket on over it. “This is police business, Vicki, stay out of it. Please.” He didn’t wait for a response but crossed the shadows to the bedroom door. Then he paused, one foot over the threshold. “I doubt I’ll be back by dawn. Don’t wait up.”
Vicki Nelson, ex of the Metropolitan Toronto Police Force, ex private investigator, recent vampire, decided to let him go. If he could joke about the change, he accepted it. And besides, it was always more fun to make him pay for smart-ass remarks when he least expected it.
She watched from the darkness as Celluci climbed into Dave Graham’s car. Then, with the taillights disappearing in the distance, she dug out his spare set of car keys and proceeded to leave tangled entrails of the Highway Traffic Act strewn from Downsview to the heart of Toronto.
It took no supernatural ability to find the scene of the crime. What with the police, the press, and the morbidly curious, the area seethed with people. Vicki slipped past the constable stationed at the far end of the alley and followed the paths of shadow until she stood just outside the circle of police around the body.
Mac Eisler had been a somewhat attractive, not very tall, white male Caucasian. Eschewing the traditional clothing excesses of his profession, he was dressed simply in designer jeans and an olive-green raw silk jacket. At the moment, he wasn’t looking his best. A pair of rusty nails had been shoved through each manicured hand, securing his body upright across the back entrance of a trendy restaurant. Although the pointed toes of his tooled leather cowboy boots indented the wood of the door, Eisler’s head had been turned completely around so that he stared, in apparent astonishment, out into the alley.
The smell of death fought with the stink of urine and garbage. Vicki frowned. There was another scent, a pungent predator scent that raised the hair on the back of her neck and drew her lips up off her teeth. Surprised by the strength of her reaction, she stepped silently into a deeper patch of night lest she give herself away.
“Why the hell would I have a comment?”
Preoccupied with an inexplicable rage, she hadn’t heard Celluci arrive until he greeted the press. Shifting position slightly, she watched as he and his partner moved in off the street and got their first look at the body.
“Jesus H. Christ.”
“On crutches,” agreed the younger of the two detectives already on the scene.
“Who found him?”
“Dishwasher, coming out with the trash. He was obviously meant to be found; they nailed the bastard right across the door.”
“The kitchen’s on the other side and no one heard hammering?”
“I’ll go you one better than that. Look at the rust on the head of those nails—they haven’t been hammered.”
“What? Someone just pushed the nails through Eisler’s hands and into solid wood?”
“Looks like.”
Celluci snorted. “You trying to tell me that Superman’s gone bad?”
Under the cover of their laughter, Vicki bent and picked up a piece of planking. There were four holes in the unbroken end and two remaining three-inch spikes. She pulled a spike out of the wood and pressed it into the wall of the building by her side. A smut of rust marked the ball of her thumb but the nail looked no different.
She remembered the scent.
Vampire.
“…unable to come to the phone. Please leave a message after the long beep.”
“Henry? It’s Vicki. If you’re there, pick up.” She stared across the dark kitchen, twisting the phone cord between her fingers. “Come on, Fitzroy, I don’t care what you’re doing, this is important.” Why wasn’t he home w
riting? Or chewing on Tony. Or something. “Look, Henry, I need some information. There’s another one of, of us, hunting my territory and I don’t know what I should do. I know what I want to do …” The rage remained, interlaced with the knowledge of another. “… but I’m new at this bloodsucking undead stuff, maybe I’m overreacting. Call me. I’m still at Mike’s.”
She hung up and sighed. Vampires didn’t share territory. Which was why Henry had stayed in Vancouver and she’d come back to Toronto.
Well, all right, it’s not the only reason I came back. She tossed Celluci’s spare car keys into the drawer in the phone table and wondered if she should write him a note to explain the mysterious emptying of his gas tank. “Nah. He’s a detective, let him figure it out.”
Sunrise was at five twelve. Vicki didn’t need a clock to tell her that it was almost time. She could feel the sun stroking the edges of her awareness.
“It’s like that final instant, just before someone hits you from behind, when you know it’s going to happen but you can’t do a damn thing about it.” She crossed her arms on Celluci’s chest and pillowed her head on them adding, “Only it lasts longer.”
“And this happens every morning?”
“Just before dawn.”
“And you’re going to live forever?”
“That’s what they tell me.”
Celluci snorted. “You can have it.”
Although Celluci had offered to lightproof one of the two unused bedrooms, Vicki had been uneasy about the concept. At four and a half centuries, maybe Henry Fitzroy could afford to be blasé about immolation but Vicki still found the whole idea terrifying and had no intention of being both helpless and exposed. Anyone could walk into a bedroom.
No one would accidentally walk into an enclosed plywood box, covered in a blackout curtain, at the far end of a five-foot-high crawl space—but just to be on the safe side, Vicki dropped two-by-fours into iron brackets over the entrance. Folded nearly in half, she hurried to her sanctuary, feeling the sun drawing closer, closer. Somehow she resisted the urge to turn.
“There’s nothing behind me,” she muttered, awkwardly stripping off her clothes. Her heart slamming against her ribs, she crawled under the front flap of the box, latched it behind her, and squirmed into her sleeping bag, stretched out ready for the dawn.
“Jesus H. Christ, Vicki,” Celluci had said squatting at one end while she’d wrestled the twin bed mattress inside. “At least a coffin would have a bit of historical dignity.”
“You know where I can get one?”
“I’m not having a coffin in my basement.”
“Then quit flapping your mouth.”
She wondered, as she lay there waiting for oblivion, where the other was. Did they feel the same near panic knowing that they had no control over the hours from dawn to dusk? Or had they, like Henry, come to accept the daily death that governed an immortal life? There should, she supposed, be a sense of kinship between them but all she could feel was a possessive fury. No one hunted in her territory.
“Pleasant dreams,” she said as the sun teetered on the edge of the horizon. “And when I find you, you’re toast.”
Celluci had been and gone by the time the darkness returned. The note he’d left about the car was profane and to the point. Vicki added a couple of words he’d missed and stuck it under a refrigerator magnet in case he got home before she did.
She’d pick up the scent and follow it, the hunter becoming the hunted and, by dawn, the streets would be hers again.
The yellow police tape still stretched across the mouth of the alley. Vicki ignored it. Wrapping the night around her like a cloak, she stood outside the restaurant door and sifted the air.
Apparently, a pimp crucified over the fire exit hadn’t been enough to close the place and TexMex had nearly obliterated the scent of a death not yet twenty-four hours old. Instead of the predator, all she could smell was fajitas.
“God damn it,” she muttered, stepping closer and sniffing the wood. “How the hell am I supposed to find …”
She sensed his life the moment before he spoke. “What are you doing?”
Vicki sighed and turned. “I’m sniffing the door frame. What’s it look like I’m doing?”
“Let me be more specific,” Celluci snarled. “What are you doing here?”
“I’m looking for the person who offed Mac Eisler,” Vicki began. She wasn’t sure how much more explanation she was willing to offer.
“No, you’re not. You are not a cop. You aren’t even a P.I. anymore. And how the hell am I going to explain you if Dave sees you?”
Her eyes narrowed. “You don’t have to explain me, Mike.”
“Yeah? He thinks you’re in Vancouver.”
“Tell him I came back.”
“And do I tell him that you spend your days in a box in my basement? And that you combust in sunlight? And what do I tell him about your eyes?”
Vicki’s hand rose to push at the bridge of her glasses but her fingers touched only air. The retinitis pigmentosa that had forced her from the Metro Police and denied her the night had been reversed when Henry’d changed her. The darkness held no secrets from her now. “Tell him they got better.”
“RP doesn’t get better.”
“Mine did.”
“Vicki, I know what you’re doing.” He dragged both hands up through his hair. “You’ve done it before. You had to quit the force. You were half blind. So what? Your life may have changed but you were still going to prove that you were ‘Victory’ Nelson. And it wasn’t enough to be a private investigator. You threw yourself into stupidly dangerous situations just to prove you were still who you wanted to be. And now your life has changed again and you’re playing the same game.”
She could hear his heart pounding, see a vein pulsing framed in the white vee of his open collar, feel the blood surging just below the surface in reach of her teeth. The Hunger rose and she had to use every bit of control Henry had taught her to force it back down. This wasn’t about that.
Since she’d returned to Toronto, she’d been drifting; feeding, hunting, relearning the night, relearning her relationship with Michael Celluci. The early morning phone call had crystallized a subconscious discontent and, as Celluci pointed out, there was really only one thing she knew how to do.
Part of his diatribe was based on concern. After all their years together playing cops and lovers she knew how he thought; if something as basic as sunlight could kill her, what else waited to strike her down. It was only human nature for him to want to protect the people he loved—for him to want to protect her.
But, that was only the basis for part of the diatribe.
“You can’t have been happy with me lazing around your house. I can’t cook and I don’t do windows.” She stepped towards him. “I should think you’d be thrilled that I’m finding my feet again.”
“Vicki.”
“I wonder,” she mused, holding tight to the Hunger, “how you’d feel about me being involved in this if it wasn’t your case. I am, after all, better equipped to hunt the night than, oh, detective-sergeants.”
“Vicki …” Her name had become a nearly inarticulate growl.
She leaned forward until her lips brushed his ear. “Bet you I solve this one first.” Then she was gone, moving into shadow too quickly for mortal eyes to track.
“Who you talking to, Mike?” Dave Graham glanced around the empty alley. “I thought I heard …” Then he caught sight of the expression on his partner’s face. “Never mind.”
Vicki couldn’t remember the last time she felt so alive. Which, as I’m now a card-carrying member of the bloodsucking undead, makes for an interesting feeling. She strode down Queen Street West, almost intoxicated by the lives surrounding her, fully aware of crowds parting to let her through and the admiring glances that traced her path. A connection had been made between her old life and her new one.
“You must surrender the day,” Henry had told her, “but you need not su
rrender anything else.”
“So what you’re trying to tell me,” she’d snarled, “is that we’re just normal people who drink blood?”
Henry had smiled. “How many normal people do you know?”
She hated it when he answered a question with a question but now, she recognized his point. Honesty forced her to admit that Celluci had a point as well. She did need to prove to herself that she was still herself. She always had. The more things changed, the more they stayed the same.
“Well, now we’ve got that settled …” She looked around for a place to sit and think. In her old life, that would have meant a donut shop or the window seat in a cheap restaurant and as many cups of coffee as it took. In this new life, being enclosed with humanity did not encourage contemplation. Besides, coffee, a major component of the old equation, made her violently ill—a fact she deeply resented.
A few years back, CITY TV, a local Toronto station, had renovated a deco building on the corner of Queen and John. They’d done a beautiful job and the six-story, white building with its ornately molded modern windows, had become a focal point of the neighborhood. Vicki slid into the narrow walkway that separated it from its more down-at-the-heels neighbor and swarmed up what effectively amounted to a staircase for one of her kind.
When she reached the roof a few seconds later, she perched on one crenellated corner and looked out over the downtown core. These were her streets; not Celluci’s and not some out-of-town bloodsucker’s. It was time she took them back. She grinned and fought the urge to strike a dramatic pose.
All things considered, it wasn’t likely that the Metropolitan Toronto Police Department—in the person of Detective-Sergeant Michael Celluci—would be willing to share information. Briefly, she regretted issuing the challenge then she shrugged it off. As Henry said, the night was too long for regrets.
She sat and watched the crowds jostling about on the sidewalks below, clumps of color indicating tourists amongst the Queen Street regulars. On a Friday night in August, this was the place to be as the Toronto artistic community rubbed elbows with wanna-bes and never-woulds.
Vicki frowned. Mac Eisler had been killed before midnight on a Thursday night in an area that never completely slept. Someone had to have seen or heard something. Something they probably didn’t believe and were busy denying. Murder was one thing, creatures of the night were something else again.