Musette literally stamped her foot at me. “You will not spoil our fun. You cannot touch me, they will not let you.”
I looked at them, and frowned. “They’re not just vampires, are they?”
“What do you mean, ma petite?”
I could feel them, feel a presence that shouldn’t have been there. “They feel like shape-shifters. Vampires can’t be shape-shifters.” I realized even as I said it that that wasn’t entirely true. The Mother of All Darkness was a shape-shifter and a vampire. I’d felt that.
“I thought Mommy Dearest was the first vampire, the one who made you all.”
“Oui, ma petite.”
“Are there any vampires on the council that descend directly from her?”
Jean-Claude thought about that for a moment. “We all descend from her.”
“That’s not what I asked.”
Asher answered, “There is no one that can claim direct descent from her line, but she founded the council of vampires. She began our civilization, gave us rules, so that we were no longer solitary beasts, killing each other on sight.”
“So she’s your cultural mother, not your line’s originator.”
“Who can tell for certain, ma petite? She is the beginning of what we are today. She is our Mother in all ways that are important.”
I shook my head. “Not all ways.” I stood out of reach and said, “Someone who speaks whatever they speak translate this for me.”
Valentina stepped up. “They understand French now.”
“Fine. Jean-Claude.”
“I am here, ma petite.”
“Tell them that Musette has forfeited safe conduct, and we need to place her under arrest. She won’t be harmed, but she won’t be allowed to harm anyone else.”
Jean-Claude spoke slow French, so I could understand a lot of it. I had picked up more and more over the years, but rapid speech still gave me problems. “I have told them.”
“Then tell them this, too. If they don’t move out of the way so we can arrest her, then we are within the rules that the Mother of Darkness laid down—to kill them for disobeying the rules.”
Jean-Claude looked doubtful.
“Just repeat it,” I said. I walked away a little to find Bobby Lee. He was sweating and looked unwell.
“I am sorry, Anita. We failed you.”
I shook my head. “Not yet you haven’t.”
He looked puzzled.
“Open your leather jacket, wide.”
He did what I asked.
I took his gun out of its shoulder holster and got a glimpse of a second gun in his belt. Rules said only guards could be armed. I pointed the gun at the ground, and clicked off the safety.
His eyes were very wide. I wasn’t actually sure if he could let me have the gun. But he did, and I threaded my way carefully back through the crowd to the front lines.
The gun was invisible, held in the folds of my full black skirt. “What did they say, Jean-Claude?”
“They don’t believe anyone here can hurt them. They say that they are invincible.”
“How long have they been asleep?”
Jean-Claude asked them. “They don’t know for certain.”
“How do they know they’re invincible?” I asked.
He asked, and they drew swords from under their white coats. Short swords, forged of something darker and heavier than steel. Was it bronze? I wasn’t sure. I just knew it wasn’t steel.
We all stepped back from the drawn blades, whatever they were made of. “They say that no weapon born of man can harm them,” Jean Claude said.
Musette laughed. “They are the finest warriors ever created. You will not touch me with them as my protectors.”
I stepped back, put myself in as balanced a stance as I could get with the high heels, and raised the gun. I aimed for a headshot, and got it. The vampire’s head exploded in a wash of blood and brains. The sound of the shot seemed to echo forever, and I couldn’t hear the yell I saw on the lips of the second warrior as he charged me. His head exploded like the first one had. All the hand-to-hand combat training in the world is useless if your enemy doesn’t let you get close enough to use it.
Musette stood blinking, too shocked to move, I think. She was covered in blood and gore. Her blond hair and pale face were a red mask, out of which her blue eyes blinked. Her white dress was half crimson.
I aimed the gun at her startled face. I thought about it, God knows, I thought about it. But I didn’t need Jean-Claude’s frightened, “Ma petite, please, for all our sakes, do not do this,” to make me hesitate. I couldn’t kill Musette, because of what Belle Morte might do in retaliation. But I let Musette see in my eyes, my face, my body, that I would kill her, that I wanted to kill her, and that, given the right excuse, I might forget Belle’s vengeance for the second it would take me to pull a trigger.
Musette’s eyes filled with glistening tears. She was a fool, but not so big a fool as all that. But I had to be certain, so we didn’t have these misunderstandings again. “What do you see in my face, Musette?” My voice was low, almost a whisper, because I was afraid of what my hand would do if I yelled.
She swallowed and, it was loud to my ringing ears. “I see my death upon your face.”
“Yes,” I said, “yes, you do. Never forget this moment, Musette, because if it happens again, it will be your last moment.”
She let out a shaking breath. “I understand.”
“I hope so, Musette, I really, truly, hope so.” I lowered the gun, slowly. “Now, Merle can you oversee Musette and Angelito going to their rooms, right now.”
Merle stepped forward, and a small army of werehyenas moved with him. “My Nimir-Ra speaks, and I obey.” I’d heard him say things like that to Micah before, but never to me, or at least not like he meant it.
Merle stepped over the bodies of the dead vampires to take Musette’s arm. The wereheynas looked pale, but happier. I’d just made all the muscle in the room happy, because things were simple now. We could kill them if they messed up again.
I caught Jean-Claude’s expression. He was not happy. I’d made the soldiers’ job easier, but not the politicians’. No, I think I’d just complicated the hell out of the political side of things.
Merle led Musette, none too gently over the bodies. She stumbled, and only a mass of werehyenas kept Angelito from grabbing her. Musette regained her balance, and the room suddenly smelled like roses.
I thought I’d choke on my own pulse as Musette raised her head and showed eyes the color of dark honey.
46
BELLE MORTE LOOKED at me, out of Musette’s face, and I think I stopped breathing. All I could hear for a moment was the hammering of my own heart in my head. Sound returned with a rush, and Belle Morte’s voice slid out of Musette’s mouth.
“I am vexed with you, Jean-Claude.”
Merle kept trying to drag her across the room. Either he didn’t know the shit had hit the fan, or one vampire was all the same to him. He was about to learn otherwise.
“Release me,” she said in a calm voice.
Merle dropped her arm as if she’d burned him. He backed away from her the way that Bobby Lee had backed away from Musette, with a look of pain, holding his arm as if it hurt.
“The leopard is her animal to call,” Jean-Claude said, and his voice carried into yet another heavy silence. But I didn’t have time to think about silence, because Belle was talking, saying awful things.
“I have been gentle up ’til now.” She turned and looked back at the two dead vampires. “Do you know how long the council has been trying to wake up the Mother’s first children?”
I think we all thought it was a rhetorical question, one we were afraid to answer.
She turned back to face us, and something swam underneath Musette’s face, like a fish pushing against water. “But I awakened them. I, Belle Morte, awakened the Mother’s children.”
“Not all of them,” I said, and immediately wished I’d kept my mouth shut.r />
She gave me a look that was so angry it burned, and so cold, it made me shiver. It was as if all that had ever been of rage and hatred were in that one look. “No, not all of them, and now you have taken two away from me. What ever shall I do to punish you?”
I tried to speak around the pulse in my throat, but Jean-Claude answered, “Musette broke the truce, and would not concede it. We have obeyed the law to the letter.”
“It is true,” Valentina said. The crowd of black leather-glad grown-ups moved so the child vampire could come and stand near Musette/Belle. Valentina kept out of reach, though. I noticed that.
“Speak, little one.”
Valentina told the story of how Musette had withheld information about the child molestation and what had happened because of it. Musette’s body turned to look at Stephen and Gregory. Gregory was holding his brother, rocking him. Stephen wasn’t looking at anyone, or anything. Whatever his staring eyes saw, it was nothing in this room.
Belle turned back to us, and again there was that sense of another face swimming underneath, but this time I saw it like a ghost superimposed over Musette’s face. Ghostly black hair bled over the blond, a face with more cheekbones, more strength to it, showed for a moment, before it sank back into the softer beauty of Musette.
“Musette did break truce first. I concede that.”
Why was it that my heart rate didn’t slow a single beat when she said that?
Her next words came out in a purring contralto, a voice like fur to caress the skin and ease across the mind. “You have acted within the law, and now so shall I. When Musette and the rest come back to me, Asher will come with them.”
“Temporarily,” Jean-Claude said, but his voice held doubt.
“Non, Jean-Claude, he will be mine as of old.”
Jean-Claude took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “According to your own laws, you cannot take someone permanently away from those to whom he, or she, belongs.”
“If he belonged to anyone, that would be true. But he is no one’s pomme de sang, no one’s servant, no one’s lover.”
“That is not true,” Jean-Claude said, “he is our lover.”
“Musette communicated with me, told me that she smelled your lies, your weak effort to keep Asher from her bed.”
Belle was able to smell lies, too, if the lie was something she understood. No vampire could tell truth from falseheard if it was about something they didn’t understand. If a vampire had no loyalty, they couldn’t discern it in others—that sort of thing. I was going to try and give her something she could understand.
“I didn’t think it was a weak effort,” I said.
Jean-Claude gave me a look, and I shook my head at him. He stepped gracefully aside, because he knew I had a plan, but his voice whispered through my head, “Be careful, ma petite.”
Yeah, I’d be careful.
Belle turned her borrowed body to look at me. “So you admit it was an attempt to lie to Musette.”
“No, I said it wasn’t weak. I found the whole thing embarrassing, exciting, wonderful, and terrifying. Being in bed with Asher wasn’t exactly what I thought it would be.”
“You haven’t lied, yet,” she said, and her voice was so rich, it was as if I should have been able to get down on the ground and roll myself up in it like some soft, warm, suffocating carpet. Her voice was enticing like Jean-Claude’s and Asher’s could be, but also frightening.
“We took Asher to our bed, and by European standards we are lovers.”
“By European standards,” she looked confused, and her face pushed out against Musette’s. This time it was like a mask. The sense of something larger, more dangerous pushing against Musette’s face. I knew through Jean-Claude’s memories that Belle wasn’t physically much bigger than Musette, but physical size wasn’t all there was to Belle Morte. “I do not understand what that means, ‘European standards’.”
Jean-Claude answered, “Americans have a most peculiar idea that only intercourse between a man and a woman constitutes true sex. Anything else does not truly count.”
“I taste truth, but I find it most odd.”
“As do I, but it is still true.” He gave that Gallic shrug.
I added, “What Musette kept smelling wasn’t a lie, it was my hang-up that Asher and I hadn’t had true intercourse. Trust me, we were all naked and sweaty in the bed.”
She turned that strange half-face to me. It would have looked more frightening if her face hadn’t been surrounded by Musette’s long blond banana curls. The Shirley Temple look was not meant for Belle. “I believe you, but by your own admission you are not lovers, not truly by your own standards. Thus, Asher is mine.”
“You don’t care about the truth, I forgot that,” I said.
She narrowed those honey-gold eyes at me. “You have forgotten nothing, little one. You do not know me.”
“I have Jean-Claude’s memories, here and there. That’s enough. They should have taught me better than to use truth.”
She walked towards me, and as she did, her body seemed to fold over Musette’s, so that she wasn’t just a face, but a dress of dark gold, a longer arm, a pale hand with copper-colored nails. She moved like a ghost draped over Musette, so that you got glimpses of the other woman underneath. It wasn’t perfect, Belle Morte wasn’t really physically there, but it was close, and it was unnerving.
Jean-Claude had moved so that he touched me from behind by the time Belle came to stand in front of me. I leaned back against him, because she had marked me once, and that was without any physical touch. I leaned against Jean-Claude and fought the urge to draw his arms around me like a shield.
Belle stood so close that the edge of Musette’s full skirt brushed my feet. Belle’s ghostly dress seemed to bleed over my shoes, creep up my ankles. I couldn’t breathe.
Jean-Claude moved us backwards, out of reach of that creeping power. I pulled his arms around me tight. Screw it, I was scared.
“If truth will not work with me, what will, ma petite?” Belle asked.
I found my voice, it was breathy, scared, but there was nothing I could do about it. “I am Jean-Claude’s ‘ma petite,’ no one else’s.”
“But whatever he has is mine, so you are my ma petite.”
I decided to let that argument go, for now. There were other more important ones I needed to win. “You asked if truth doesn’t work with you, then what does?”
“Oui, ma petite, I did ask.”
“Sex or power,” I said, “that’s what works for you. You prefer both together, if you can get it.”
“Are you offering me sex?” She purred at me, and the sound made me shudder and push myself harder against Jean-Claude. I didn’t want to play with Belle, not in any way.
“No,” I said, in almost a whisper.
She reached out towards me, that slender white hand with its dark copper nails, and that afterimage of Musette’s hand underneath, as if Belle’s graceful hand were a strange metaphysical glove.
Jean-Claude moved us back again, a fraction of a fraction of an inch, so that those long-nailed fingers missed my cheek by a breath.
Belle looked at him, her long black hair beginning to move around her body like there was a wind blowing around her. There was no wind, only Belle’s power.
“Are you afraid that one touch and I will take her from you?”
“No,” Jean-Claude said, “but I know more of what your touch can do, Belle Morte, and I am not sure that Anita would care for it.”
He’d used my real name, he almost never did that. Perhaps because Belle was using my nickname, he didn’t want to.
Her anger burned the air in front of us, like a real fire, stealing the oxygen from the lungs, making it impossible to breathe, unless you took that heat into your lungs. Then they would sear, and you would die.
The heat filled her words, so that I half expected them to be burned into the very air. “Did I ask if she would care to be touched?”
“No,” Jean-Claude
said, his voice was very still, and I felt him sinking away, even with his arms wrapped around me, he was sinking away, folding into that quietness that he went to when he hid from everything. I had a glimpse of that quiet place, and it was quieter than the place I went when I killed. There wasn’t even static there, only complete silence.
The emptiness filled with the smell of roses, sweet, so sweet, cloying, choking. I gasped, and all I could taste was roses. Jean-Claude caught me, or I would have fallen. The perfume of roses filled my nose, my mouth, my throat. I couldn’t swallow past it, couldn’t breathe anything but perfume. I would have screamed, but I had no air.
I heard Jean-Claude yelling, “Stop this!”
Belle laughed, and even choking to death, the sound rode through my body like a knowledgeable hand.
A hand grabbed mine, and a breath of air clawed its way down my throat, fighting its way through Belle’s power. Again if I’d had enough air, I’d have screamed. Micah’s face hovered over mine. Micah’s hand in mine.
“Non, mon chat, you are mine, as is she.” Belle knelt beside us, reaching out to touch Micah’s face.
Jean-Claude moved us all backwards, so that we collapsed on the floor at her knees, but we were out of reach again, barely. But barely was good right then.
Belle’s eyes burned with honey fire, and the nails of her hand bled copper flames on the air, as she reached for Micah. Jean-Claude tried to help us crawl away, but we’d fallen in a heap of long skirts, long coats. Death by fashion.
Belle touched Micah’s face, trailed those glowing claws down his cheek. The smell of roses closed over my head like sweet poisoned water, and I was drowning again.
Another hand on me, and this touch had nothing warm in it, it didn’t call the ardeur, it didn’t call my beast, it called something colder and more certain of itself. My necromancy came welling up and it burst over my skin, my body, and I stared up into Belle’s burning eyes, and I could breathe. My throat was sore as hell, but I could breathe.
I moved my eyes enough to see Damian holding my other hand. His eyes were wide, and I could feel his fear, but he was there, kneeling beside me, facing the power that was Belle Morte.
Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter collection 11-15 Page 40