Read Anita Blake 24 - Dead Ice Online
Authors: Laurell K. Hamilton
“I should know what that is,” I said.
“What do you mean, should know?” Micah asked.
“I’ve seen it before; I didn’t know it did this to lycanthropes, but . . .” I took a deep breath and tried to dredge up the memory. “Vampires, it was supposed to kill them if you injected it into the bloodstream.”
“What was supposed to kill them?” Micah asked.
“Silver nitrate,” I said.
“I thought that looked more silver.”
I shook my head. “People think that, but the silver liquid that beads up is mercury; they use that in movies, but in real life silver nitrate isn’t as silver as that, and it doesn’t bead up like mercury either.”
“Did it work on vampires?” he asked.
“It worked, but it wasn’t quick enough for the older ones, and a vampire can do a lot of damage to you in its death throes.”
“How did it get in my wound?”
“Maybe it was in the blade when he broke it open inside you,” I said.
“The healer would have seen it,” Micah said.
“Unless she put the silver nitrate in the wound when she was supposed to be putting dressing on it.”
Micah knelt beside Rafael again. “Did it burn when she dressed the wound?”
“Yes, she said it was a coagulant and antiseptic. The bleeding did stop.”
“Because she burned the wound closed,” Micah said. He turned to me. “Help me turn him so the water will flush out the wound.”
We got him on his knees. I knelt in front of him, letting him put his hands on my shoulders, and steadied him as Micah turned on the water. It hurt at first, but as the water flushed out the poison he began to relax. The water ran for a long time before Micah was satisfied.
“How does it feel now?” he asked.
“Better, much better,” Rafael said.
“Are the burned edges in the wound healing?” I asked.
Micah knelt down and examined the other man’s back. “No, it’s reacting like a burn on us. The healing just stops.”
“I can’t keep an open wound in my back forever,” Rafael said.
“You don’t have to, but making it so you can heal it is going to hurt a lot,” I said.
He looked at me from inches away because we were both still kneeling on the wet floor. “How will you cure me?”
“If you get a limb amputated and burned at the same time, what do you do as a shapeshifter?” I asked.
His dark eyes studied mine, and then I saw him understand. “How much and how deep is it burned?”
“A lot of the wound and as deep as it goes into your back,” I said.
“You’re talking about cutting off the burned area so his body can heal the new wounds, aren’t you?” Micah said.
“Yeah,” I said.
“That’s going to hurt more than just a lot,” he said.
“Yep, but now we can get the doctor on call to do it.”
“No,” Rafael said in that so-certain voice.
“Yes,” I said.
“No,” he said.
“This isn’t weakness on your part; no lycanthrope could heal this, Rafael. If you’d been weaker it could have killed you, but you were just too strong for the bastards.”
“Is the pain making me miss your point?”
“Maybe, but this was a deliberate plot to kill you; the challenger was only one of the conspirators. The healer was at least his partner in crime, if not part of a larger plot.”
“Anita is right, Rafael; only someone as strong as you could have survived this attack. If your body hadn’t healed fast enough to keep the silver nitrate from entering your bloodstream, you might never have made it here alive.”
“The healer must die for this,” he said, at last.
“Yes,” Micah said, “but first we need to find out if she and your challenger were the only ones involved in the plot. If it’s a larger problem we need to know that.”
“Yes, yes, of course, I think the wound is clouding my thinking.”
“Pain will do that,” I said.
“Let’s get your guards in here to help take you to the medical area. I’ll alert the doctor on duty.”
“I need to give orders to Benito about the healer, before the doctor begins cutting on me.”
“Agreed,” Micah and I said together.
“Will you both help me give the orders needed? I want to make certain she is alive long enough for questioning.”
“We’ll help you give clearheaded orders,” I said.
“Thank you, both of you.” He hugged me and held his other hand out to Micah, who took it. Sometimes I wasn’t sure if the sex I had with Rafael was really what made us more than friends; maybe it was the shared mantle of responsibility instead? Something about having people trying to kill you, and knowing that the three of us were on the short list of those we could trust implicitly, was a pretty good bonding experience. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown, and all that jazz.
M
ICAH AND I
stayed with Rafael long enough to see him safely with the doctor in the medical area we’d put in under the Circus. We had too many injuries that we didn’t want to explain to a normal hospital, like Rafael’s stab wound. Dr. Lillian had even found a painkiller that would work, briefly, on shapeshifters so he didn’t have to feel every cut as she sliced away the damaged tissue and let the blood flow. Once it was just fresh wounds he’d be able to heal himself, maybe slower than normal because of what caused the damage, but he’d heal.
But before he let Doc Lillian give him the painkiller, he talked to Micah, Benito, and me. He set in motion that the healer who had done this would be taken, questioned, and eventually killed. That last part wasn’t stated, but it was a given. You try to assassinate the king, you die; period. Regicide is just one of those crimes that has to carry maximum punishment to discourage anyone else.
Micah went back to see if there was still food for dinner. I went to get clothes, because even though most of the lycanthropes would have walked around nude if we’d let them, I just felt better with clothes on if it was normal, everyday stuff. Naked was for sleeping and sex. Nathaniel texted me that he’d saved me food. I’d stopped off at the locker room to free my guns, because now that I had belt loops and pants I could load up again. My good gun belt was tacky with the clear stuff that I’d washed off myself. I’d planned on cleaning the leather after my shower, but the next emergency had distracted me. I was debating on cleaning it before I went to dinner, which would mean I was unarmed but would give the leather time to dry out, when my phone rang.
I might have ignored it, but the ring tone was work, as in raising the dead, not catching bad guys. “I’m not working tonight, what’s up?”
“Anita, it’s Manny.”
That made me pay more attention. He wouldn’t have called without a good reason. “What’s wrong?”
“I’m on duty tonight, so I’m watching the GPS on the zombies we have out.”
“Zombie babysitting, better you than me.”
“The zombie you raised tonight isn’t at any of the addresses on the list of clients.”
“Where is it?”
“Denny’s.”
“Denny who?”
“The restaurant,” he said.
“You mean the zombie is at Denny’s restaurant?”
“That’s where the ankle GPS says it is.”
“Shit, they can’t take him to a restaurant. It’s illegal to have a zombie inside a place that does food service. Health services will close them down for an investigation if they find out.”
“I know.”
“Of course you know. I’ll call the client. Maybe they got the munchies and the zombie is sitting in the parking lot.”
“Didn’t they request hours to question this zombie for historical battles, or something?”
“Yeah, they did.”
“Most of the ones that ask for that don’t go out for munchies,” he said.
“You’re right. I’ll call them, let you know what they say.”
“Can’t wait to hear this one,” Manny said.
“Clients are weird,” I said.
“Amen,” he said.
“Thanks, Manny, I’ll call you back.” I hung up and called Mr. MacDougal. What the hell were they doing at Denny’s with my zombie?
MacDougal answered on the third ring. “Ms. Blake, what can we do for you?”
“The GPS on the zombie says you’re not at any of your home addresses.”
“No, we went out for food.”
“And took the zombie with you; is it sitting in the car?”
“No, he’s right here.”
“Inside the restaurant.”
“Yes.”
“You’re not allowed to bring zombies inside restaurants, Mr. MacDougal.”
“Whyever not?”
“It’s a health ordinance, something about rotting corpses near food.”
“But Thomas isn’t like that.”
“Yeah, I do good work. Why did you take him to a restaurant? If you’re done questioning him, then I can put him back in his grave tonight.”
“He was hungry.”
“What? Who was hungry?”
“Thomas.”
“Thomas is a zombie, they don’t get hungry.”
“Well, he’s done a very good imitation of it.”
“What?”
“He’s enjoying his meal, quite a lot.”
“Zombies don’t eat,” I said.
“Would you just like to speak to him directly?”
“What?”
“Thomas, it’s Ms. Blake calling to check up on us.”
A man’s voice, cultured, with a slight southern echo in it, said, “Miss Blake, I am told that I owe my adventure on this side of the veil to you.”
My mouth was suddenly dry. I had to swallow before I could say, “Mr. Warrington, I hear you’re enjoying your meal. What did you order?”
“A breakfast skillet, they call it.”
“Yeah, they can be tasty.” My voice sounded normal, but my pulse was fighting to speed up.
“I like this Coca-Cola very much.”
“Me, too,” I said. “Can you put Mr. MacDougal back on the phone, please?”
“And the phones, they are amazing. Whoever thought that I could be talking into this little box and you hear me miles away. It is a marvel.”
“Yes, it is, just need to speak with Mr. MacDougal for a minute.”
MacDougal came back on the line. “Isn’t he wonderful?”
“Yeah, he is. Finish your meal, have coffee, dessert, let him get the full ride.”
“We intend to.”
“Great, maybe you can take him to someplace a little higher end tomorrow.”
“Denny’s was all that was open this time of night, near my house.”
“Totally understand. I’ll see you soon.”
“Good night, Ms. Blake. This experience has surpassed our wildest expectations.”
“Customer satisfaction is always a priority,” I said, and hung up. I called Manny back.
“What did the client say?”
I told him.
“Anita, zombies don’t get hungry, and they are incapable of eating. They don’t have a working digestive system.”
“I know,” I said.
“It’s one of the clients having you on, Anita. You couldn’t have talked to the zombie. They answer questions, but not like that.”
“I’ve had a few that could,” I said.
“You didn’t tell me that.”
“We haven’t been working together much the last few years,” I said.
“Have you ever had a zombie that did this?”
“If you mean eat a real meal like a live human being, never, but I’ve seen zombies that got hungry.”
“You never told me that either.”
“I don’t mean go-to-Denny’s hungry, Manny, I mean flesh-eating zombies. You know some of the cases I’ve had. I didn’t raise them, but I got to clean up the mess afterward.”
“Do you think he’s a flesh eater?”
“I think he’s eating a skillet breakfast at Denny’s and enjoying his adventure this side of the veil; his words, not mine.”
“Hell, Anita, that’s wrong, that’s so wrong. He should not be that aware.”
“I know that, I so know that, Manny.”
“Pick me up on the way. I gotta see this zombie for myself.”
“The office is on the way, see you in about twenty minutes. Maybe sooner if I hit the lights and sirens.”
“This isn’t police business, Anita; isn’t that against the rules?”
“No one knows how a flesh-eating zombie starts out, Manny. Just in case it starts with wanting a nice meal at a sit-down restaurant, let’s get there sooner rather than later.”
“You really afraid the zombie will start rampaging through Denny’s?”
“Yeah, aren’t you?”
“Yeah, I am,” he said.
“See you in twenty, or sooner.”
“Make it sooner,” he said.
“Lights and sirens it is.” I took the time to put all my weapons on and grab my vampire-hunting kit, because it had the really big guns and scary shit in it. I’d fought flesh-eating zombies before; they were as strong as a vampire but didn’t feel pain, which made them a whole lot harder to stop. I prayed as I ran for the stairs,
Please God, don’t let him turn on them. Please, don’t let him hurt anyone.
I was calling the zombie a him, not an it; that was not a good sign. All the flesh eaters I’d seen had been truly walking corpses and hadn’t looked alive at all, but there was always a first for everything. I did not want the very first gentleman flesh eater. I really didn’t.
I made the mistake of telling the truth when Nathaniel asked why I was running out with my whole kit over my shoulder. Everyone insisted I take guards as backup, just in case. I didn’t have time to argue, so Nicky and Domino were with me as I hit the stairs. Nicky had called ahead so that bigger guns were waiting for them in the storage room up top. Again, I didn’t argue, because if the worst happened we were running out of time, and we’d need the firepower.
Why not call other police to meet us there? Because maybe I’d just raised a zombie so alive that he could eat a meal and talk about his adventure, and the only thing scary about him was that he was too human. I preferred that to him turning into a ravaging cannibalistic killing machine, but him being that alive scared the hell out of me, too. It was just a different kind of scared.
Nicky asked to carry my vampire-hunting kit. “You’ll be faster on the stairs without it.”
Normally I would have argued and carried my own damn equipment, but since it weighed almost as much as I did, I gave it to Nicky. He threw it over his shoulder. I started running up the stairs, and then the men were up with me, and the three of us fucking ran.
I
CALLED MANNY
from the car, and he was waiting for us outside work. He wasn’t much taller than me, a slender, dark figure with salt-and-pepper hair standing under the streetlight. It highlighted him like a spotlight, ruining his night vision and making him a great target if anyone was aiming for him. He’d been my teacher in the early days of vampire hunting, but he’d never really stopped being a stake-and-hammer man, and that was only good for daytime vamps dead in their coffins, or morgue kills where the vamps were chained down with holy items. Outside those two instances I preferred shotguns or assault rifles, though handguns would do in a pinch.