Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10
Page 20
“Glad you like it,” Rizzo said.
I looked up at him. “Thank you, Officer.”
He grunted and moved away from us to lean against the other wall.
“I talked to Ted Forrester, your pet bounty hunter. The gun in your purse is registered to him.” Dolph sat back down, blowing on his coffee.
Ted Forrester was one of Edward’s aliases. It had stood up to police scrutiny once before when we ended up with bodies on the ground. He was, as far as the police knew, a bounty hunter specializing in preternatural creatures. Most bounty hunters stayed in the Western states where there were still substantial bounties on shapeshifters. Not all of them were particularly careful that the shapeshifter they killed was really a danger to anyone. The only criteria some states had was that after death, the body was medically certified as a lycanthrope. A blood test was sufficient in most cases. Wyoming was thinking of changing its laws because of three wrongful death suits that had made it all the way to their state supreme court.
“I needed a gun small enough to fit in the purse but with stopping power,” I said.
“I don’t like bounty hunters, Anita. They abuse the law.”
I sipped coffee and stayed quiet. If he knew just how much Edward abused the law, he’d have locked him up for a very long time.
“If he’s a good enough friend to bail your ass out of this kind of trouble, why haven’t you mentioned him before? I didn’t know he existed until that last trouble you had with those shapeshifter poachers.”
“Poachers,” I said and shook my head.
“What’s wrong?” Dolph asked.
“Shapeshifters get killed, and its poaching. Normal people get killed, and it’s murder.”
“You sympathizing with the monsters now, Anita?” he asked. His voice was even quieter, so still you might have mistaken it for calm, but it wasn’t. He was pissed.
“You’re mad about something other than the body count,” I said.
“You’re involved with the Master of the City. Is that how you keep getting all that inside info on the monsters?”
I took a deep breath and let it out. “Sometimes.”
“You should have told me, Anita.”
“Since when is my personal life police business?”
He just looked at me.
I looked down into my coffee mug, staring at my hands. I finally looked back up. It was hard meeting his eyes, harder than I wanted it to be. “What do you want me to say, Dolph? That I find it embarrassing that one of the monsters is my boyfriend? I do.”
“Then drop him.”
“If it were that easy, trust me, I’d do it.”
“How can I trust you to do your job, Anita? You’re sleeping with the enemy.”
“Why does everyone assume I’m sleeping with him? Doesn’t anybody but me date people and not have sex?”
“I apologize for the assumption, but you got to admit a lot of people are going to assume the same thing.”
“I know.”
The door opened, and Greeley came back inside. His eyes took in the handcuffs being gone, the coffee. “You have a nice chat?”
“How’d your statement to the press go?” Dolph asked.
He shrugged. “I told them Ms. Blake was being questioned in connection with a death on the premises. Told ’em that no vamps were involved. Not sure they believed me. They kept wanting to speak to the Executioner. Though most of them were calling her the Master’s girlfriend.”
That made me flinch. Even with a career of my own, I was going to end up being Mrs. Jean-Claude in the press. He was more photogenic than I was.
Dolph stood. “I want to take Anita out of here.”
Greeley stared at him. “I don’t think so.”
Dolph set his coffee on the desk and went to stand next to the other detective. He lowered his voice, and there was a lot of harsh whispering. Greeley shook his head. “No.”
More whispering. Greeley glared at me. “All right, but she comes down to the station before the night is over or it’s your ass, Sergeant.”
“She’ll be there,” Dolph said.
Rizzo was staring at all of us. “You’re taking her out of here, but not to the station house?” It sounded accusatory even to me.
“That’s my decision, Rizzo,” Greeley said. “You got that?” His voice growled the words. Somehow Dolph had pulled rank, and Greeley didn’t like it. If Rizzo wanted to make himself a convenient target for that anger, fine.
Rizzo faded back against the wall, but he wasn’t happy about it. “I got that.”
“Get her out of here,” Greeley said. “Try the back. But I don’t know how you’ll get past the cameras.”
“We’ll walk through,” Dolph said. “Let’s go, Anita.”
I set my mug on the desk. “What’s up, Dolph?”
“I got a body for you to look at.”
“A murder suspect helping with another case. Won’t the brass get mad?”
“I cleared it,” Dolph said.
I looked at him, eyes wide. “How?” I asked.
“You don’t want to know,” he said.
I looked at him. He stared back. I finally looked away first. Most of the time, when people said I didn’t want to know, it meant just the opposite. It meant I probably needed to know. But from a handful of people, I’d take their word for it. Dolph was one of those people. “Okay,” I said. “Let’s go.”
Dolph let me wash the dried blood off my hands, and we went.
18
* * *
I’M NOT a big one for idle chatter, but Dolph makes me seem loquacious. We drove down 270 in silence, the hiss of the wheels on the road and the thrum of the engine the only sounds. Either he’d turned off his radio or nobody was committing crimes in Saint Louis tonight. I was betting the radio was off. One of the good things about being a detective on a task force is you don’t have to listen to the radio all the time, because most of the calls aren’t your problem. If Dolph was needed somewhere, they could always beep him.
I tried to hold out. I tried to make Dolph talk first, but after nearly fifteen minutes, I broke. “Where are we going?”
“Creve Coeur.”
My eyebrows raised. “That’s a little upscale for a monster kill.”
“Yeah,” he said.
I waited for more; there wasn’t any more. “Well, thanks for enlightening me, Dolph.”
He glanced at me, then back to the road. “We’ll be there in a few minutes, Anita.”
“Patience has never been my strong suit, Dolph.”
His lips twitched, then he smiled. Finally, he laughed, a short, abrupt sound. “I guess not.”
“Glad I could lighten the mood,” I said.
“You’re always good for a laugh when you’re not killing people, Anita.”
I didn’t know what to say to that. Too close to the truth, maybe. Silence settled over the car, and I left it alone. It was an easy, friendly quiet this time, tinged with laughter. Dolph wasn’t mad at me anymore. I could stand a little silence.
Creve Coeur was an older neighborhood , but it didn’t look it. The age showed in the large houses set in long, sloping yards. Some of the houses had circular drives and servants’ quarters. The few housing developments that had crept in here and there didn’t always have big yards, but the houses had variety, pools, rock gardens. No cookie cutter houses, nothing déclassé.
Olive is one of my favorite streets. I like the mix of gas stations, Dunkin’ Donuts, custom order jewelry stores, Mercedes-Benz dealerships, and Blockbuster Music and Video. Creve Coeur isn’t like most ritzy areas, at war with the peons. This part of the city has embraced both its money and its commerce, as comfortable buying fine antiques as taking the kiddies through the drive-up line at Mickey-D’s.
Dolph turned on a road sandwiched between two gas stations. It sloped sharply, making me want to use the brake. Dolph didn’t share this desire, and the car coasted down the hill at a nice clip. Well, he was the police. No speeding ti
cket, I guess. We sped past housing developments that branched off the road like true suburbia. The houses were still more distinct, but the yards had shrunk, and you knew that most of what you were driving past had never had servants’ quarters. The road climbed just a touch, then evened out. Dolph hit his turn signal while we were still in the shallow valley. A tasteful sign said Countryside Hills.
Police cars clogged the narrow streets of the subdivision, lights strobing the darkness. There was a huddle of people being held back by uniformed police, people clutching light coats over their jammies or standing with robes tied tight. The crowd was small. As we got out of the car, I saw a drape twitch in a house across the street. Why come outside when you can peek from the comfort of your own home?
Dolph led me through the uniforms and the twist of yellow Do-Not-Cross tape. The house that was the center of attention was one story with a brick wall as tall as the walls of the house forming an enclosed courtyard. There was even a wrought iron gate to the curved entrance, very Mediterranean. Except for the courtyard, the house looked like a typical suburban ranch. There was a stone path and square, rock-edged beds full of rosebushes. Floodlights filled the walled garden, lending every petal and leaf its own shadow. Someone had gone way overboard on the in-ground lighting.
“You don’t even need a flashlight in here,” I said.
Dolph glanced at me. “You’ve never been here then?”
I met his eyes and couldn’t read them. He was giving me cop eyes. “No, I’ve never been here. Should I have been?”
Dolph opened the screened door without answering. He led the way in, and I followed. Dolph prides himself on not influencing his people, letting them come in cold and make their own conclusions. But even for him, he was being mysterious. I didn’t like it.
The living room was narrow but long with a TV and video center at the end of it. The room was so thick with cops there was barely room to stand. Every murder scene gets more attention than it needs. Frankly, I wonder if more evidence is lost with all the traffic than is found with all the busy hands. A murder can make a cop’s career, especially that jump from uniform to plainclothes. Find the clue or the evidence, shine at the critical time, and people notice. But it’s more than that. Murder is the ultimate insult, the last worst thing you can do to another human being. Cops feel that, maybe more than the rest of us.
The cops parted before Dolph, eyes shifting to me. Most of the eyes were male, and after the first glance, almost all of them did the full body look. You know the look. The one that if the face and top match, they just have to see if the legs are as good as the rest. It works in reverse, too. But any man that starts at my feet and ends with my face has lost every brownie point he ever had.
Two short hallways led straight off the living room at right angles, a dining room directly off of the first room. An open door revealed carpeted stairs leading to a finished basement. Cops were traveling up and down the stairs like ants, with bits of evidence in plastic baggies.
Dolph led me down one of the hallways, and there was a second living room with a fireplace. It was smaller and more boxlike, but the far wall was entirely brick, which made it seem warmer, cozier. The kitchen showed to the left through an open doorway. The top half of the wall was a pass-through, open like a window so you could work in the kitchen and still talk to people in the living room. My father’s house had a pass-through.
The next room was obviously new. The walls still had that raw paint look of fresh construction. Sliding glass doors made up the left-hand wall. A hot tub took up most of the floor space. Water still clung in beads to its slick surface. They’d finished the hot tub before they’d painted the room. Priorities.
A hallway so roughed out it still had that heavy plastic they put down for workers to walk on led away from the tub. There was another larger bathroom, not quite finished, and a closed door at the end of the hall. The door was carved, new wood, light-colored oak. It was the first closed door I’d seen inside the house. That was kind of ominous.
Except for the cops, I hadn’t seen a damn thing out of place. It looked like a nice upper-middle-class house. A family kind of house. If I’d walked straight into carnage, I’d have been all right, but this long buildup had tightened my stomach, filled me with dread. What had happened in this nice house with its new hot tub and brick fireplace? What had happened that needed my kind of expertise? I didn’t want to know. I wanted to leave before I saw some new horror. I’d seen enough bodies already this year to last a lifetime.
Dolph put his hand on the doorknob. I touched his arm. “It’s not kids, is it?” I asked.
He glanced over his shoulder at me. Normally, he wouldn’t have answered. He’d have said something cryptic like, “You’ll see in a minute.” Tonight, he said, “No, it’s not kids.”
I took a deep breath through my nose and let it out slowly through my lips. “Good.” I smelled damp plaster, fresh cement, and underneath that, blood. The scent of freshly spilled blood, faint, just behind the door. What does blood smell like? Metallic, almost artificial. It isn’t really much of a smell all by itself. The smell won’t make you sick, it’s what goes with it. We all know in some ancient part of ourselves that blood is the thing. Without it, we die. If we can steal enough of it from our enemies, we steal their lives. There’s a reason that blood has been associated with almost every religion on the planet. It’s primal stuff, and no matter how sanitized we make our world, part of us still recognizes that.
Dolph hesitated, hand still on the doorknob. He didn’t look at me while he spoke. “Tell me what you think of the scene, then I have to take you back for a statement. You understand that.”
“I understand,” I said.
“If you’re lying to me, Anita, about any of this, tell me tonight. Two bodies in two days takes a lot of explaining.”
“I haven’t lied to you, Dolph.” At least not much, I added in my head.
He nodded without turning around and opened the door. He went in first and turned so he could watch my face as I entered the room.
“What’s wrong, Dolph?” I asked.
“See for yourself,” he said.
All I could see at first was pale grey carpet and a bureau with a large mirror against the right-hand wall. A cluster of cops blocked my view of the rest of the room. The cops stepped aside at a nod from Dolph. Dolph never took his eyes from me, my face. I’d never seen him so intent on my reaction before. It made me nervous.
There was a body on the floor. A man, spread-eagled, pinned at wrists and ankles with knives. The knives had black hilts. He lay in the middle of a large red circle. The circle had had to be large so the blood didn’t leak out and spoil it. Blood had soaked into the pale carpet, spread across it like a red ruin. The man’s face was turned away from me. All I could see was short blond hair. His chest was bare, so slick with blood it looked like a red shirt. The knives held him in place. They hadn’t been what killed him. No, what had killed him was a gaping hole in his lower chest just below the ribs. It was like a red-lined cave big enough to plunge both hands into.
“They took his heart,” I said.
Dolph looked at me. “You know that from the doorway?”
“I’m right, aren’t I?”
“If you were going to take his heart out, why not go straight down?”
“If you wanted him to survive, like heart surgery, you’d have to break the ribs and go down the hard way. But they wanted him dead. If all you want is the heart, going under the ribs is easier.”
I walked towards the body.
Dolph moved ahead of me, watching my face. “What?” I said.
He shook his head. “Just tell me about the body, Anita.”
I stared at him. “What is your problem tonight?”
“No problem.”
It was a lie. Something was up, but I didn’t press it. It wouldn’t have done me any good. When Dolph decides not to share information, he doesn’t share, period.
There was a king-size bed w
ith purple satin sheets and more pillows than you knew what to do with. The bed was rumpled as if it had been used for something other than sleeping. There were dark stains on the sheets, nearly black.
“Is that blood?”
“We think so,” Dolph said.
I glanced at the body. “From the murder?”
“When you’re finished looking at the body, we’ll bag the sheets and get them down to the lab.”
A subtle hint to get on with the job. I walked towards the body and tried to ignore Dolph. That was easier than it sounded. The body sort of stole the show. The closer I got, the more details I could see, and the more I didn’t want to see. Under all that blood was a nice chest, muscular but not too much of a good thing. The hair was cut very short, curly and blond. There was something naggingly familiar about that head. The black daggers had silver wire curled around them. They’d been shoved to their hilts in the flesh, bones had broken when they’d been driven in. The red circle was definitely blood. Cabalistic symbols ran round the inside of the circle, traced in blood. I recognized some of them, enough to know that we were dealing with some form of necromancy. I knew the symbols that stood for death and the symbols that watched against it.
For some reason, I didn’t want to enter the circle. I walked carefully around the edge of it until I could see the face. With my back leaning against the wall I stared into the wide eyes of Robert the vampire. Monica’s husband. The soon-to-be daddy.
“Shit,” I said softly.
“You know him?” Dolph asked.
I nodded. “Robert. His name’s Robert.” The death symbols made sense if you were going to sacrifice a vampire. But why? Why like this?
I took a step forward and hit the circle. I stopped dead. It was like a million insects crawled and swarmed over my body. I couldn’t breathe. I stepped back off the blood line. The sensation stopped. I could still feel it like a memory on my skin, in my head, but I was okay now. I took a deep breath, let it out slowly, and stepped forward again. It wasn’t like hitting a wall. It was more like hitting a blanket, a drowning, suffocating, maggot-crawling blanket. I tried to walk forward, tried to move past the circle, and couldn’t. I staggered back from it. If the wall hadn’t been there, I’d have fallen.