“Yes, ma petite.”
He was right. I did know that. But the sight of a human skin nailed to a door had thrown me. It was a first, even for me. “Sweet Jesus, do the silver nails mean the victim was vampire or lycanthrope?”
“Most likely,” Jean-Claude said.
“Does that mean they’re still alive?”
He looked at me. His look managed to be empty and eloquent all at the same time. “They were alive when the skin was removed. If vampire, or lycanthrope, the mere removal of the skin would not be sufficient to kill them.”
A shudder ran through me from head to feet. It wasn’t exactly fear. It was horror. Horror at the casualness of it, the callousness of it. “Asher mentioned Padma. Is he the Beast Master?”
“The Master of Beasts,” Jean-Claude said. “You cannot kill him for this indiscretion, ma petite.”
“You’re wrong,” I said. The horror was there like a coating of ice underneath my skin, but over that was anger. Rage. And under the rage was fear. Fear of anyone that would skin another person alive just to make a point. Told you something about a person. Told you how few rules they had. Told me, in no uncertain terms, that I should kill him as soon as I saw him.
“We cannot punish them for this tonight, ma petite. Tonight is about survival for all of us. Remember that and curb your anger.”
I stared at the thing on the door. “I am way past anger.”
“Then curb your rage. We must save the rest of our people.”
“If they’re alive.”
“They were alive when I came upstairs to wait for you,” Liv said.
“Whose skin is it?” I asked.
She laughed, and it was her usual bray. All healed, all better. “Guess,” she said. “If you guess right, I’ll tell you, but only if you guess right.”
It took more control than was pretty not to point the Browning at her. I shook my head. “No games, Liv, not with you. The real games don’t even begin until we get downstairs.”
“Well said, ma petite. Let us go down.”
“No,” Liv said. “No, you’ll guess. You’ll guess who it is. I want to see your face. I want to see the pain in your eyes while you think about each of your friends, Anita. I want to watch the horror on your face while you picture it happening to each of them.”
“What did I ever do to you, Liv?”
“You stood in my way,” she said.
I shook my head and pointed the gun at her. “Three strikes and you’re out, Liv.”
She frowned. “What are you talking about?”
“Betraying us was one. Trying to roll me with your eyes was number two. That was partly my fault, so I would have let it go. But you took an oath to protect all of Jean-Claude’s people. You swore to use that wonderful body, that strength, to protect those weaker than yourself. Whoever belongs to that skin was someone you swore to protect. Instead, you betrayed them. Delivered them over to hell. Strike three, Liv.”
“You can’t kill me, Anita. The Traveler will heal me, no matter what you do.”
I shot her in the right kneecap. She fell to the floor, holding the shattered leg, writhing, screaming.
I felt myself smile, most unpleasant. “I hope it hurts, Liv. I hope it hurts like hell.”
The temperature in the room dropped like a stone. It felt cold enough that I half expected to see my breath. Liv’s screams stopped, and she stared up at me with her violet eyes. If looks could have killed, I’d have dropped on the spot.
“You cannot harm me, Anita. My master will not allow it.” Liv got to her feet with the faintest of limps. She walked to the door with its awful burden. She stretched the edge of the thing, showing holes in the skin that had nothing to do with the skinning process. “I fed on him while they tortured him. I drank his blood while he screamed.” Her fingers came away stained with blood. She licked them clean, sliding her fingers in and out of her mouth. “Hmm, tasty.”
All I had to do was guess who it was, and she’d tell me. All I had to do was play her game. I shot her in the other knee.
She collapsed to the floor, shrieking. “Don’t you understand? You can’t hurt me.”
“Oh, I think I can, Liv, I think I can.” I shot the right knee again. She lay on her back, screaming, grabbing at her shattered knees, and recoiling, because her own touch hurt.
The Traveler’s power raised the hair on my body in a shiver of goose bumps. He really was going to heal her. If I wasn’t going to kill her, I needed to be somewhere else before she could walk. I knew Liv well enough to know that when she could stand she was going to be pissed. Not that I blamed her. In fact, if I just stood there long enough for her to get to her feet, it’d be self-defense. Of course, it’d be premeditated self-defense.
“Come, ma petite, let her be. The Traveler does not give his blessings so easily a second time, or would this be the third? He will heal her at his own pace now. A blessing and a punishment rolled into one. As most of the council’s gifts are wont to be.”
He opened the door that led downstairs. His hand came away with blood on it. He held the hand out in front of him like he didn’t know what to do with it. He finally walked through the door, wiping his hand along the wall, smearing the blood down the stones in a faint crimson line.
“The longer we delay, the more tortures they will think of.” With that comforting line he started down the steps. I gave one last glance to Liv. She lay on her side, crying, shrieking. She was shrieking that she was going to see me dead. I should have shot her in the head until her brains leaked on the floor. If I was truly ruthless, I would have. But I didn’t. I left her alive and screaming threats. Edward would have been so disappointed.
14
THE STEPS LEADING underground were taller than normal, as if whatever they were originally designed for wasn’t quite human. I kicked the door shut, didn’t want to touch the blood. The door cut Liv off in mid-scream. I could still hear her very faintly, like the high buzzing of an insect, but the door was almost soundproof. Needed something to muffle the screams from below. Of course, tonight there was only silence on the stairs. A silence so deep that it vibrated in my ears.
Jean-Claude moved in a boneless grace, like a big cat, down the awkward steps. I had to wrap the end of the coat over my left arm to keep from tripping over it. Even then, I didn’t glide down the stairs. In three-inch heels I sort of limped.
Jean-Claude waited at the bend of the stairs just before the landing. “I could carry you, ma petite.”
“No, thanks.” If I took the shoes off, the dress would be so long I’d need to hold it up. I needed one hand free for a gun. If my choices were being slow and having a gun drawn, or being fast and having my hands full of dress…I’d be slow.
The stairs stretched empty, wide enough to drive a small car down. The door at the base of the stairs was solid oak, iron bound like the door to a dungeon. Tonight, not a bad analogy.
Jean-Claude pulled on the heavy door, and it swung open. It was usually kept locked. He turned to me. “The council can demand that I greet every vampire within these walls, formally.”
“You mean like you did with Liv?” I asked.
He gave a very small smile. “If I do not acknowledge their dominance over me, then perhaps.”
“What if you do acknowledge them?” I asked.
He shook his head. “If we had gone to the council for aid of some kind, then I would not fight. I would simply acknowledge their superiority and be done with it. I am not strong enough to be council. I know that.” He smoothed his hands down the ruffles of his shirt, adjusting the cuffs on his jacket so the ruffles at his wrists showed to best advantage. He often fussed with his clothes when he was nervous. Of course, he fussed with his clothes when he wasn’t nervous, too.
“I hear a ‘but’ coming,” I said.
He smiled at me. “Oui, ma petite. But they have come to us. They have invaded our lands. Harmed our people. If we acknowledge them as greater than ourselves without a struggle, they may set up a new master in my
place. They may take all I have gained.”
“I thought the only way to step down as master was to die.”
“They would come to that, eventually.”
“Then we go in kicking butt.”
“But we cannot win by violence, ma petite. What we did with Liv was to be expected. She had to be punished. But in a struggle to kill or be killed, the council will win.”
I frowned up at him. “If we can’t just say they’re bigger and badder than we are, and we can’t fight them, what can we do?”
“We play the game, ma petite.”
“What game?”
“The game that I mastered at court so long ago. It is a thing of diplomacy, bravado, insults.” He raised my left hand to his lips and laid a gentle kiss on it. “You will be very good at part of the game, and very bad at others. Diplomacy is not your strong suit.”
“Bravado and insults are two of my best things.”
He smiled, still holding my hand. “Indeed, ma petite, indeed. Put the gun away. I am not saying do not use it, but have a care who you shoot. Not everything you will meet tonight can be harmed by silver bullets.” He cocked his head to one side as if thinking. “Though come to that, I’ve never seen anyone try to kill a council member with modern silver ammunition.” He smiled. “It might work.” He shook his head as if to rid himself of the image. “But if it comes to trying to slay the council by bullets, then all is lost and all that will be left is to take as many of them with us as we can.”
“Let’s save as many of our people as we can, too,” I said.
“You don’t understand them, ma petite. If we are dead, there will be no mercy for those who are loyal to us. Any good revolution kills the loyalists first.” He touched the back of my right hand lightly, reminding. I still had the gun out. Somehow, I just didn’t want to put it away.
But I did. I put the safety on. I didn’t want them to know the gun was there, so I couldn’t keep holding it. I put the safety on because I didn’t want to shoot myself in the leg. It would be embarrassing as well as painful and probably wouldn’t impress the council one little bit. I didn’t understand “the game,” but I’d hung around vampires long enough to know that if you could impress them, sometimes you walked out alive. Of course, sometimes they killed you anyway. Sometimes a show of bravado just earned you a slower death, like it did with some American Indian tribes that only tortured enemies they thought worthy of the honor. An honor I could do without. But sometimes in the midst of being tormented you could get away. If they just tore your throat out, all options were over. We were definitely going for impressive. If we could impress them, we’d kill them. If we couldn’t kill them…they’d kill us. Liv had just been the beginning of the evening’s entertainment.
The living room was a bare stone room once again. Jean-Claude’s efforts at redecorating lay in piles of black-and-white cloth and broken wood. The only thing untouched was the portrait above the false fireplace. Jean-Claude, Julianna, and an unscarred Asher gazed down at the ruins. I expected an unpleasant surprise to be waiting for us. There was only Willie McCoy standing in front of the cold fireplace. He had his back to us, hands clasped behind him. His pea-green suit clashed with his slicked-back black hair. One sleeve was torn and bloodstained. He turned towards us. Blood seeped from a gash on his forehead. He dabbed at it with a handkerchief covered in dancing skeletons. It was silk and had been a gift from his girlfriend, a century-old vamp who had recently joined us. Hannah was as tall, leggy, and lovely as Willie was short, badly dressed, and well…Willie.
He smiled at us. “So good of you to join us.”
“Can the sarcasm,” I said. “Where is everybody?” I started walking towards him, but Jean-Claude stopped me with a hand on my arm.
Willie’s smile was almost gentle. He stared at Jean-Claude with a look of expectancy. It was an expression I’d never seen on Willie’s face.
I glanced at Jean-Claude’s perfect mask of a face, closed and careful. No—fearful.
“What’s going on?” I asked.
“Ma petite, may I introduce the Traveler.”
I frowned at him. “What are you talking about?”
Willie laughed, and it was the same irritating bray he’d always had, but it ended in a low, chuckling growl that raised the hairs at the base of my neck. I looked at him and knew the shock showed on my face.
I had to swallow before I could talk, even then I didn’t know what to say. “Willie?”
“He can no longer answer your call, ma petite.”
Willie stood there staring at me. He had been an awkward person alive. Dead, he hadn’t been much better. He hadn’t been dead long enough to master that otherworldly movement that the others had. He walked towards us in a wave of his own liquid grace. It wasn’t Willie.
“Shit,” I said softly. “Is it permanent?”
The stranger in Willie’s body laughed again. “I am merely borrowing his body. I borrow a great many bodies, don’t I, Jean-Claude?”
I felt Jean-Claude draw me backwards. He didn’t want to get closer. I didn’t argue. We backed up. It was odd being backed up by Willie. Normally, he was one of the least scary vamps I knew. Now, tension sang down Jean-Claude’s hand. I could taste his heart beating in my own head. He was afraid, and that made me afraid.
The Traveler stopped, hands on hips, laughing. “Afraid I will use you as my horse, Jean-Claude? If you are truly strong enough to have slain the Earthmover, then you should be strong enough to withstand me.”
“I am cautious by nature, Traveler. Time has not lessened the habit.”
“You always did have a smooth tongue in your head and so many other places.”
I frowned at the double-entendre, not sure I caught the meaning, not sure I wanted to. “Let Willie go.”
“He is not being harmed,” the vampire said.
“He is still inside the body,” Jean-Claude said. “He still feels, still sees. You have only pushed him aside, Traveler, not replaced him.”
I glanced at Jean-Claude. His face showed nothing. “You say that like you know from personal experience.”
“Jean-Claude was one of my favorite bodies, once upon a time. Balthasar and I enjoyed him very much.”
Balthasar walked out of the far hallway as if he’d been waiting for his cue. Maybe he had. He was smiling, but it was more a baring of teeth than pleasure. He strode into the room looking elegant and roguish in his white suit. He stood behind Willie, hands on the shorter man’s thin shoulders. Willie, the Traveler, leaned back against Balthasar’s chest. The bigger man wrapped his arms around him. They were a couple.
“Will he know what they’re doing with his body?” I asked.
“Yes,” Jean-Claude said.
“Willie doesn’t like men.”
“No,” Jean-Claude said.
I swallowed and tried to think reasonably, and just couldn’t. Vampires could not take over another vampire’s body. It wasn’t possible. It just wasn’t. But I looked at Willie’s familiar face with a stranger’s thoughts flowing through his brown eyes and knew it was true.
Those brown eyes smiled into mine. I dropped my gaze. If the Traveler could do me through Liv’s eyes when he wasn’t inside her, then he’d suck me down now for sure. It had been a long time since I had had to practice the trick of staring at a face without meeting the eyes. It was like tag with the vamp trying to capture my gaze, and me avoiding it. It was irritating, and scary.
Jean-Claude had said that violence wouldn’t save us tonight. He wasn’t kidding. If a vamp had been holding Willie against his will, forcing him sexually, I’d have shot him. But it was Willie’s body, and he’d get it back. Shooting it full of holes was a bad idea. What I needed was a good idea.
“Does the Traveler like women?” I asked.
“Are you offering yourself in his place?” the vampire asked.
“No, just wondering how you’d like it if the tables were turned.”
“No one else has my ability to share a bod
y,” the Traveler said.
“Would you like it if someone forced you to have sex with a woman?”
Willie’s face cocked to one side, and the expression was alien to him. The sense of otherness was strong enough to make my skin crawl. “I have never felt the draw of a woman’s body.”
“You’d find it distasteful,” I said.
Willie, the Traveler, nodded. “Yes.”
“Then let Willie go. Pick someone who wouldn’t mind so much.”
The Traveler snuggled into Balthasar’s arms and laughed at me. “Are you appealing to my sense of mercy?”
I shrugged. “I can’t shoot you. You’re council. I was hoping that would mean you had more rules than the rest of them. Guess I was wrong.”
He looked at Jean-Claude. “Does your human servant do all your talking now?”
“She does well enough,” Jean-Claude said.
“If she seeks to appeal to my sense of fair play, then you have told her nothing about your time with us at court.”
Jean-Claude kept my left hand clasped loosely in his, but he stepped away from me. I felt him draw himself straighter as if he’d been hunched just a little, huddled around his panic. I knew he was still afraid, but he had rallied. Brave Jean-Claude. I wasn’t that afraid yet. But then, I didn’t know any better.
“I do not dwell upon the past,” Jean-Claude said.
“He is ashamed of us,” Balthasar said, rubbing his face against Willie’s. He planted a soft kiss against Willie’s temple.
“No,” the Traveler said. “He fears us.”
“What do you want of me, Traveler? Why has the council invaded my lands and taken my people hostage?”
Willie’s body pushed away from Balthasar to stand just in front of the taller man. Willie normally looked smaller than he was, sort of hunched and rabbity, but now he looked slim and certain of himself. The Traveler had given Willie the grace and assurance he never had on his own.
“You slew the Earthmover but did not come to take his council seat. There is no other way to rise to the council except through the death of another. We have a vacancy that only you can fill, Jean-Claude.”
Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Collection 6-10 Page 52