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Affliction ab-22

Page 48

by Laurell K. Hamilton


  Hatfield watched him out of the corner of her eye, her hand moving toward her duty weapon without her really thinking about it. He was just so big, so self-contained, and so neutral that it was actually unnerving. It was nice to see that I wasn’t the only one who thought it was unsettling.

  If there had been more strangers with us, Nicky and I wouldn’t have kept hugging each other, but Hatfield was going to have to either get used to it or tag along with someone else. I needed the cuddles.

  ‘What the hell happened here?’ she asked.

  ‘The nice older couple got eaten alive by zombies,’ I said.

  She gave a small shudder. ‘I know that, but why is the table in front of the door and the broken window covered? I mean … shouldn’t that have kept the zombies out?’

  The fact that she had figured out the puzzling part made me like her even more. ‘Yes, it should have.’

  ‘Even if there was a reason for them to put the table and dresser back in place, that would have trapped them in the house, and they weren’t trapped in the house. They ate the victims and then they left,’ Edward said.

  ‘So how did they get out?’ I asked.

  ‘Did you see the corkboard with all the keys in a row?’ Lisandro asked.

  We all nodded or said, ‘Yes.’

  ‘Want to see if the house key is there?’

  ‘They’ll have a spare,’ I said. ‘They’re just that kind of people.’

  ‘Okay, then let’s check and see if their keys are here. Personal keys have stuff on them, they aren’t just bare keys,’ he said.

  ‘Did anyone see the lady’s purse?’ I asked.

  No one had.

  ‘Let’s find her purse,’ Edward said.

  I didn’t want to go back in the house with the smell and the happy parade of pictures. Nicky didn’t want to go back in either. For once even Edward looked a little worn around the edges. The only one who seemed unmoved by it all was Seamus. I would have asked Nicky if he found the other man’s lack of emotional affect bothersome, but he’d have said no.

  The other two houses that we’d seen had held the remains of dead bodies; they’d been broken into, but they hadn’t been barricaded. As attacks by killer zombies went, the other two houses had been normal. The only puzzle was this one, so we went back inside to figure it out, because that was what we did when we weren’t shooting things or setting them on fire.

  60

  We couldn’t find her current purse. Hatfield suggested that not every woman carried a purse, but we couldn’t find her wallet, a change purse, any form of identification. We found her husband’s wallet with his ID, money, and credit cards all intact on the bedside table, where it looked like he put it every night.

  ‘There are three purses in the closet, but they’re dressier, or older. She should have a purse,’ Hatfield said.

  I knew what she meant. The female victim – I had to do my best to think of her as just that. Where was the woman’s purse?

  ‘Zombies don’t take purses,’ I said.

  ‘What if they’re made of leather?’ Seamus asked; his voice was as deep as you expected it to be.

  ‘Flesh-eating zombies only eat fresh kill or fresh-ish carrion. Treated leather, even the most expensive, would still be too dead for them to eat it.’

  ‘A ghoul would eat it,’ Edward said.

  I agreed. ‘But if ghouls did this, they’d have eaten the man’s belt and a lot of other stuff in the house. They live on carrion and garbage.’

  ‘I thought ghouls wouldn’t leave the cemetery where they spawn?’ Hatfield said.

  ‘They don’t normally,’ I said.

  ‘There’s no cemetery for miles and miles,’ she said.

  Edward and I looked at each other. We both remembered a case where ghouls followed a necromancer who had accidentally raised them. ‘I don’t think it’s ghouls,’ I said, to that look in his eyes.

  ‘No,’ he said.

  ‘If the zombies didn’t take the purse, who did?’ Nicky asked.

  ‘Maybe somebody broke in after they were dead and took the purse,’ Lisandro said.

  ‘Then why not take the man’s wallet? There’s over a hundred dollars in it, and a full set of credit cards,’ I said.

  ‘If it wasn’t robbery, then why take the purse?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘If it was robbery, why not take more stuff?’ Lisandro asked.

  ‘So it wasn’t robbery,’ I said.

  ‘There were vampires with the zombies in the mountains; was this a mixed group, too?’ asked Nicky.

  ‘Maybe,’ I said.

  ‘Why would a vampire take some nice old lady’s purse?’ I asked.

  ‘What was in the purse that wasn’t in the wallet?’ Edward asked.

  Lisandro, Nicky, and I all said, ‘Keys.’

  ‘They didn’t get in the window or the door. The couple barricaded themselves in, but then for some reason they opened the front door.’

  ‘Vampire mind powers?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘Not if they were already fighting off zombies in the back. The fear and panic would keep almost any vampire from being able to get a hold on their minds unless they’d had previous contact. If they’d been mind-fucked earlier, then maybe,’ I said.

  ‘Unlikely, though,’ Edward said.

  ‘Agreed.’

  ‘You have killer zombies at the back. You’ve barricaded yourself in. What would make you open the front door?’ I asked.

  ‘Who would you open it for?’ Nicky asked.

  ‘Someone you know,’ Hatfield said.

  ‘Help,’ Edward said.

  I turned to him. ‘What?’

  ‘You’d open the door in an emergency to help. If the house is on fire you’ll let the firefighters in; if you’re being robbed you’ll open for the police.’

  I looked at him. ‘You’re saying a cop.’

  ‘I’m saying either a cop or someone they trusted and thought would protect them. Maybe an officer they knew,’ he said.

  ‘We can’t accuse another officer of conspiring with vampires and killer zombies on this much guesswork,’ Hatfield said.

  ‘We’re not going to accuse anyone in particular, Hatfield, but think about it. Every house we’ve seen has been torn apart in the area of the house that wouldn’t be seen by someone just driving by. Zombies, even killer zombies, don’t think that well. If they were being controlled by a vampire, then maybe, but if what I saw and felt in the mountains is any indication, then this vampire isn’t that cool a customer.’

  ‘Maybe he’s getting more disorganized as he keeps killing?’ Edward suggested.

  ‘You mean like a serial killer disintegrating as he feeds his compulsion?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Maybe,’ I said.

  ‘But someone let the zombies and vampires out, then took the victim’s purse and calmly locked the door behind them,’ Edward said.

  ‘We’re all agreed on that,’ I said.

  ‘I’m not sure we’re all agreed on that,’ Hatfield said.

  ‘Would you agree it’s most likely?’

  ‘No,’ she said. ‘Everything I learned in class and in the field is that this does not happen. Flesh-eating zombies are incredibly rare. They do not run in packs, contrary to every zombie movie out there, right?’

  ‘Right,’ I said.

  ‘Vampires do not hang out with zombies, right?’ she asked.

  ‘Right,’ I said.

  ‘And now you want me to believe that a human, maybe a cop, is helping scout the houses, lead them in from the most unobtrusive way, and helping cover their tracks.’

  ‘Maybe,’ I said.

  ‘If he’s covering their tracks, then why leave the table in front of the door?’ Lisandro asked.

  ‘Why take the purse? He could have thrown it back through the opening at the edge of the door. There was room to shove a purse back inside,’ Nicky said.

  That time we did all agree it made no sense.

  ‘What if he doesn’t w
ant to cover for them anymore?’ Seamus asked.

  ‘What do you mean?’ I asked.

  ‘What if something about these victims made him rethink his allegiance?’

  ‘It goes back to him knowing them,’ Edward said.

  ‘Yes, or perhaps he looked at the pictures on the walls as I’ve seen all of you do and it affected him, too.’

  ‘So he’s beginning to want to get caught?’ I asked.

  ‘Not in the front of his head,’ Edward said, ‘but maybe in the back of it.’

  ‘You think he’ll just keep making more mistakes until he gives himself away?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘Maybe, but that would mean we’d have to see more crime scenes to catch his mistake. I want to catch him before they kill again,’ I said.

  ‘Of course,’ Hatfield said, ‘but how?’

  I shook my head. ‘I don’t know yet.’

  ‘Yet,’ Edward said.

  ‘Yeah, yet, it’s always yet, Ted, you taught me that.’

  He nodded and gave that small, cold smile that I knew so well. It was one of the ones he wore when he killed.

  ‘We don’t know yet,’ he said.

  ‘But we will,’ I said.

  ‘And when you figure it out, then what?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘We kill all of them,’ I said.

  ‘Even the human, if it is a human helping them?’ she asked.

  ‘Yes,’ I said.

  ‘He’ll get a trial. His lawyer will go for an insanity plea and get a reduced sentence.’

  ‘No lawyer can help anyone connected to this,’ I said.

  ‘What do you mean?’ she asked.

  ‘She means that the warrant of execution doesn’t differentiate between perpetrators.’

  Hatfield frowned. ‘I don’t understand.’

  ‘The language of a warrant of execution allows me to kill anyone who participates in the crime, Hatfield.’

  ‘You mean you can just kill a human just like that, no arrest, no trial, just bang?’

  I nodded.

  She gave me wide eyes. ‘If they’re trying to kill me, or someone else, I could pull the trigger, no problem, but you’re saying that if they were handcuffed, chained down like a vampire in the morgue, you’d just kill them.’

  ‘No, I’m saying I could legally.’

  ‘Humans don’t go dead at dawn. They’d be staring up at you, begging for their lives.’

  ‘Yeah, just like vampires do if they’re awake.’

  ‘You really don’t see a difference between taking human life and the undead, do you?’

  ‘No,’ I said.

  ‘Did you see a difference once?’

  ‘I believed sincerely that vampires were evil and I was saving the world by killing them, but that was a few years ago. I haven’t believed that for a while.’

  ‘If I start seeing vampires as people, I don’t think I could keep killing them.’

  ‘Then stay away from Anita’s friends,’ Edward said. ‘You can’t keep seeing them as monsters once you see them as people.’

  Hatfield shook her head. ‘I don’t know.’

  ‘Let’s have the rest of this discussion outside, where it smells better,’ Lisandro said.

  ‘Wererats have one of the most sensitive noses in the animal kingdom,’ I explained to Hatfield.

  She looked at Lisandro. ‘Wererat?’ she asked.

  ‘I know I’m too handsome to be a wererat – you were thinking werewolf, or wereleopard – but no, I’m just a great, big, giant rat.’

  Hatfield fought her face, and finally lost and showed her disgust. She even shuddered.

  ‘You afraid of rats?’ he asked.

  She gave a little nod.

  He smiled, but it was more a snarl, a curl of lips that didn’t match the handsomeness. ‘Then you do not want to see me in animal form.’

  ‘No,’ she said in a small voice.

  I hadn’t thought that she might literally be phobic of rats. Snakes, spiders, I might have thought of, but not rats. Funny, how you get used to things and it just stops occurring to you that it might bother someone else.

  We all trooped out onto the porch again. The view was refreshing, but there was still that smell of corpses. ‘Is the fridge working?’ I asked.

  ‘I know what you mean,’ Lisandro said. ‘The smell shouldn’t be this strong, but I checked, and the food is fine.’

  ‘Then why does that little bit of flesh smell this bad?’ I asked.

  ‘It’s almost as if there are more bodies we haven’t found,’ he said.

  I looked at Edward. He said, ‘There’s a basement.’ He pointed to the side of the deck. I went to look where he pointed, and there were stairs leading down to a door tucked up under the deck.

  ‘I didn’t see a door into the basement from the inside of the house,’ I said.

  ‘I didn’t either,’ Hatfield said.

  I looked around at everyone. ‘Anyone see a way down besides this outside door?’

  They all shook their heads.

  Edward walked back into the house, and we trailed him. He was standing in the back bedroom looking at the huge dresser. It towered up over the window, but the room was so small that it effectively blocked the entire corner of the room from view. He got one side and Nicky got the other. There was a shorter-than-average door in the wall.

  ‘They weren’t blocking the window. Someone else was blocking the door,’ I said.

  ‘Were they blocking something in, or out?’ Hatfield said.

  ‘Or were they just hiding the door from this end?’ Nicky asked.

  ‘Don’t know,’ I said.

  ‘The smell is worse near the edge of the door,’ Edward said.

  ‘You can’t usually find zombies just by the smell of the rot,’ I said.

  ‘Not usually.’

  He and I looked at each other. ‘It’s either a hell of a lot of zombies, or more bodies,’ I said.

  He nodded. ‘I have my flamethrower in the truck,’ he said.

  I smiled. ‘Not yet; let’s see what’s down there first. If it’s zombies you can barbecue it all.’

  ‘We need crime scene techs up here to at least take more pictures than just a few with our phones. They need to collect evidence,’ Hatfield said.

  ‘Technically I can call it without doing anything else,’ I said, ‘but we can call in the techs after we find out what’s down there.’

  ‘Let’s let someone know that we have more zombies, or more dead bodies here, before we confirm,’ Edward said.

  ‘You want to call for backup before we know if we need it?’ I asked.

  ‘If this turns into another hospital basement, backup might be good.’

  I didn’t know what to say; in all the years I’d known him I wasn’t sure he’d ever said that before, which meant that maybe I owed Dev an apology. If it had bothered Edward, then it had been bad. That it hadn’t bothered me more made me wonder about myself. Maybe it would hit me later, or maybe Edward needed more emotional backup than I could supply. I had my sweeties with me to cuddle, and say what you will, that helps.

  ‘Okay, we call it in,’ I said, and we did.

  Edward made the call. He told them that we suspected there was something preternatural or just bad in the basement, and if anyone wanted more pictures of the crime scene than we’d taken with our phones, then they needed to send techs out now. When they suggested sending more cops to back us up, Edward didn’t say no. He was mellowing.

  ‘Do we wait?’ I asked.

  He shook his head. ‘No.’

  ‘If we’re going in before backup arrives, then why call it in at all?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘So they’ll know where we are, just in case,’ Edward said.

  ‘Just in case what?’ she asked.

  ‘Just in case whatever is in the basement tries to eat us, or trap us, or in case the basement is all one great big trap,’ I said.

  ‘If we think it’s a trap, then we should wait,’ she said.

 
‘Probably,’ I said.

  Edward turned on the flashlight mounted to his AR.

  ‘But we’re not going to wait, are we?’ she asked.

  ‘No,’ he said.

  ‘No,’ I said.

  ‘Why aren’t we waiting again?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘Because they’re Death and the Executioner,’ Seamus said.

  ‘I thought they were Death and War,’ Hatfield said.

  ‘That, too,’ Nicky said.

  He seemed to think about it for a minute and then nodded. ‘Maybe if we follow you around enough on cases, we’ll get nifty nicknames,’ he said.

  ‘Like what?’ Nicky asked.

  ‘Minions,’ Seamus said.

  ‘What?’ Lisandro asked.

  ‘We’re her minions, all of us are,’ Seamus said, as if that made sense.

  ‘War doesn’t have minions,’ I said.

  ‘Yes, actually he does: strife, panic, anger, discord, to name a few.’

  ‘Are we delaying until backup arrives?’ Hatfield asked.

  ‘I am,’ Lisandro said. ‘The basement smells bad enough from here.’

  ‘Pussy,’ Nicky said.

  ‘Ratty, actually,’ Lisandro said.

  ‘Who’s Mole then?’ Nicky asked.

  ‘Anita’s shortest,’ Lisandro said.

  I was about to remark that they’d just made a Wind in the Willows joke, but Edward had had enough of games.

  ‘Shut up,’ Edward said. ‘Anita, get the door while I cover it.’

  ‘No,’ Nicky and Lisandro said together.

  I glared at them.

  ‘Anita doesn’t go first if we’re here to be her bodyguards,’ Lisandro said.

  ‘I’m on the job,’ I said.

  ‘So are we,’ Lisandro said, and eased past me toward the door.

  I moved into his way.

  ‘Anita, you can let me help Ted through that door, or we can argue about it until the other cops arrive, your choice.’

 

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