CHAPTER 1
I Didn’t Know You Had a Brain
I rolled over, taking most of the covers with me
as I stretched. I felt like a big, satisfied cat—well fed, well
loved, and nearly purring with contentment. Beside me, still
snoring softly, was Rick LaFleur, my boyfriend. Crap. I had
a boyfriend. I was still trying to get used to the idea.
We’d been together for more than a month, when he wasn’t
disappearing into the underbelly of New Orleans investigating—well,
investigating something he had yet to share with me. Or when I
wasn’t tied up with vamp HQ security systems. The Master of the
City had ordered a total upgrade of the grounds; I was earning my
retainer.
Our jobs meant stealing moments when we
could.
The relationship with Rick was still new. Still
scary. I wasn’t yet sure when to push the barriers of conversation,
or sharing of info, and when to hold back. Rick is a cop, so some
things he can’t share; my job means keeping clients’ secrets, so
ditto on the not sharing. It puts a barrier between us at
times.
Worse, part of me was still fighting having him
around. It wasn’t that I resisted commitment. Really. Part of me
just resisted sharing my territory. I mean, I already shared my
body with another soul, and having another person around so much
had seriously affected my lifestyle, stealing time from the other
half of my dual nature. I hadn’t shifted into Beast in two weeks,
and while she had nothing but good stuff to say about my sex life,
my big-cat was pacing unhappily at not being allowed out to
hunt.
I sat up on the side of the bed and retied my
hip-length hair into a sloppy knot at the back of my head, tucking
silver-tipped stakes into the makeshift bun. For a rogue-vamp
killer, it was an action similar to a cop carrying his weapon with
him to the potty. Overkill, paranoid, but once it had kept him
alive, so it became habit. Stakes twenty-four/seven had become my
new habit.
I eased out of bed and padded naked—except for the
gold-nugget necklace I never took off—to the bathroom of my tiny
one-room apartment in the Appalachian Mountains. I had given my
landlady notice on the place, and Rick and I had motored up from
Louisiana on our bikes—his Kawasaki and my bastard Harley—rented a
small truck, and cleared out my stuff. All that was left to load
was the TV, the bikes themselves, and the last of my linens and
clothes. Even the bed had come with the furnished apartment, and I
didn’t own much except things I could carry—clothes and weapons. My
job usually required a lot of travel, and I wasn’t in a position to
own or keep a lot of stuff unless it helped me stay alive.
Starting to wake up, moving in the murky light with
ease, I put on water for tea and turned on the coffeemaker. As I
worked, I checked on the weather through the window to see a very
dark, gray dawn, with lowering clouds and intermittent rain. The
thermometer on the tiny porch read seventy-two, not bad for summer
in the mountains, though it might hit ninety by noon. We had
arrived last night, and had only today in the high country before
heading back to New Orleans, where I was living for the next six
months, thanks to the retainer I had accepted from the Louisiana
vamp council. When that gig was over, I’d have to make a decision
where to live, but the past few months had been profitable enough
to make that much less worrisome than during my
once-upon-a-broke-and-destitute time. And with Rick in my life, it
was nice to be sticking around one place for a while.
I sat in a pink painted chair at the kitchen table,
waiting as water burbled in the coffeemaker and the flames hissed
under the pot. Pink was my landlady’s color, not mine. The shade
had never bothered me, as I wasn’t here often enough to care one
way or another about the decor, but Rick had teased me unmercifully
about the frills, ruffles, tucks, buttons, and florals that Old
Lady Pierson had thought appropriate for the rental space under the
eaves of her house.
I clicked on the TV to check the time, muting the
sound. CNN was on, showing a still shot of a good-looking man with
fierce eyes, very black skin, and short-cropped hair. The words
“Breaking News” lit the bar at the bottom, followed by “BBC claims
existence of were-creatures.”
“Crap,” I whispered. Beast awoke inside me with the
instant attentive awareness of the predator, and focused through my
eyes at the screen. I eased up the volume one notch and drew on
Beast’s excellent hearing to listen to the commentator, whose
voice-over spoke about the picture of a reporter, blond-haired and
fair-skinned, holding a microphone.
“Though no independent confirmation exists, BBC
investigator Donald Cooper, seen here in the center of the screen,
has released an interview with an African man referred to only as
Kemnebi, pictured in the upper portion of the screen. Kemnebi
claims to be a were-cat, a black leopard. In the footage that
follows we see Kemnebi remove his clothing and shift into a jungle
cat. We caution our viewers that the BBC footage is graphic and
depicts partial nudity common to his culture.”
I leaned toward the screen and watched as footage
began to roll. The man from the still shot, who was carefully
filmed above the lower hips for decorum’s sake, began to remove his
clothes, dropping them one by one to the floor. He bent, most of
him disappearing from the screen as if to remove his pants, and
then crossed the room. He was tall and thin, muscles well defined,
his skin stretched over a frame without an ounce of fat. He moved
with a lissome grace uncommon in humans other than dancers. Still
silent, the man knelt on a cushion on the floor, the camera viewing
him from the side, the long, lean length of his body gleaming—a lot
of skin for an American cable TV network.
Tension raced through me. It could be a joke. No
new supernatural being had appeared on the world stage since the
vamps and witches came out of the supernat closet after the Secret
Service staked Marilyn Monroe while she was trying to turn the
president in the Oval Office. No elves, no pixies, no trolls, no
brownies, no nothing. Certainly no weres or skinwalkers—or there
wasn’t since I killed the only one of my kind I’d ever met. That
very old, very nutso skinwalker had stolen the form of a vamp and
taken to killing and eating humans and vampires, so it had been a
sanctioned kill. Since then, as a shape-shifter in hiding, I was a
singularity in the world of humans, vamps, and witches. No longer,
if the BBC’s claims were real. If.
I closed my fingers on the arms of the chair,
digging in with my nails. I’m a skinwalker, not a were; I didn’t
know if the magics would be the same, totally different, or only
subtly dissimilar. If it was real.
The man began to lose focus. A pale fog seemed to
sift from his skin and surround him, blurring him, the mist moving
slowly, as if caught in a breeze. Dark lights sparkled through the
haze, looking like black crystals on the digital footage. It wasn’t
exactly the way I looked when I shifted, though a lot of things
might affect what I was seeing, from the digital processing
software to my cheap TV. But it was familiar. Very achingly
familiar.
The black lights surrounding Kemnebi increased as
the mist above his skin darkened, deepened. His bones popped, a
sickening sound, as they shortened or lengthened and the joints
reshaped. He threw back his head, mouth open in what looked like a
silent scream, like gut-wrenching pain. Black hair sprouted all
over his body. His spine bowed and arched. Canines grew up from his
gums, an inch long on the bottom jaw, longer on top. His jaw and
skull took on different contours, flowing into a catlike form. I
could see the effort and agony as his flesh rippled, stretched, and
restructured into something else.
I couldn’t look away from the screen. Cold sweat
broke out on my body. I could hear my breath, coarse and uneven
over the soft patter of rain on the metal roof. My heartbeat raced
and stuttered.
Beast placed a clawed paw onto my mind as if to
calm me, her gaze intent on the screen before us. Beast is not
prey, she thought at me. Will not be afraid.
Yeah, right, I thought back. I never looked
away from the transformation on the television. My eyes burned, hot
and scratchy. I shivered, skin prickling. Two minutes passed. The
fog that was a man wisped away. A jungle cat sat on the floor where
once the man had knelt. It had a black coat, with barely visible
muted spots that caught the light. Its paws had retractable claws
like my Beast’s, but its tail was long and slender, unlike my
Beast’s heavy, clubbed version. The black leopard looked into the
camera. Huffed. And, I swear, it grinned.
Beast trembled deep inside, her coat bristling
against my skin, coarse and almost painful. Big-cat. Like Beast.
But not like Beast. Beast opened her mouth and chuffed in
displeasure, pulling back her lips, showing her fangs deep in my
mind, as if the leopard on-screen could see her challenge and her
strength. Beast is better. I/we are better hunter.
Stronger.
“Is it real,” said the CNN reporter when the screen
flashed back to a still of Donald Cooper, “or is it a hoax? Or
maybe it’s only special effects for an upcoming British
action-adventure blockbuster. Or”—his voice dropped lower—“may be
other supernatural creatures like Kemnebi, the African black
were-leopard, have been living among us all along. More on this
breaking news as it develops.”
I flipped to the BBC, finding only footage of a war
zone somewhere, and began flipping cable news stations for more on
the were. There was nothing. Not yet. From behind me, I heard the
bed squeak and had a moment to school my face as Rick rolled over
and glanced at the television, then stared at me, sitting naked in
the stark shadows created by the TV’s glare. He smiled slowly, his
eyes roaming over me in the bluish light, his teeth white against
his black two-day beard. Even with the stubble—or maybe in part
because of it—he was stunning. Black-eyed, slender, my six feet in
height or an inch more, he had the smooth golden olive complexion
of his mostly French and American Indian heritage. With his shaggy,
bed-head black hair, he was by far the prettiest man I had ever
known. Just looking at him could make my heart speed up, dance
around, and melt into a puddle of happy hormones. Even this
morning, when the world was changing around me. “Morning, babe,” he
said, voice gravelly with sleep. “What time is it? I smell
coffee.”
“Morning, yourself. Sorry I woke you. It’s five
a.m. I put on a pot.”
“The rain woke me, not you. How did you live here
with the noise?”
The question was rhetorical and I didn’t answer.
I’d scarcely noticed the rain on the metal roof. As he slid from
the sheets, the light from the TV caught the scars on his chest and
abdomen, white against his skin, big-cat claws in harsh relief.
He’d nearly died fighting the skinwalker in sabertooth lion form
that had tried to kill him while he was undercover for the New
Orleans Police Department, something he’d half forgotten. He was
alive today only because Beast and I had chased off the skinwalker
and called the vampire Master of the City of New Orleans to save
him.
Rick stretched his way into the bathroom, the
flickering light dappling his skin, his tattoos looking dark and
menacing—the golden eyes of the crouching mountain lion and the
bobcat on one shoulder visible in the gloom, the globes of red on
their claws too bright. Seeing them, I shivered again. I didn’t
believe in fate or karma, but the presence of my two cats painted
on his body had always seemed like a sign, a portent, that we
should, and one day would, be together. And now we were. When one
of us wasn’t working.
The bobcat had been the first animal I’d shifted
into when I was a child. The mountain lion was my adult beast, and
my Beast, the other soul sharing my head. That she was inside with
me wasn’t skinwalker magic, but something darker. She was there by
accident, but even an accident didn’t make the black magic any
cleaner, purer, or more acceptable.
Beast is amused by my guilt, any guilt, even the
guilt I feel about stealing her soul. My Beast goes by many names:
cougar, puma, panther, catamount, screamer, devil-cat, silver lion,
mountain lion, and even the North American black panther, but they
all refer to one beast—the Puma concolor, which once was the
widest ranging mammal on the North American continent, and is still
one of the largest modern-day land predators in the continental
U.S. other than humans, bears, a few large wolves, and the
vamps.
Rick moved toward the coffeepot like steel to a
magnet and found a mug in the dark. My heart did a little
pitter-patter and a blood flush touched my skin, evidence of
Beast’s appreciation of my boyfriend. Since Rick and I had, um,
gotten together, my own emotional roller coaster had smoothed out,
and her rut had faded. I hadn’t had any more peculiar crying jags,
and Beast had begun to purr more often. When Beast is happy,
everybody—or everyone in my body—is happy. I heard coffee pouring
into the mug and the softer sounds of swallowing. Rick sighed in
pleasure, a sound I was learning had many different meanings—food,
music, and sex each had its own sigh. Coffee, however, was in a
category by itself, being as much relief as bliss.
I looked back at the TV, back on CNN, and saw a
still shot of a sitting leopard. I gestured with the remote,
keeping my voice light, slightly wry. “Big news. Guy claims he’s a
black were-leopard. I just saw him change shape on BBC
footage.”
Rick went still, staring at the screen, studying
the jungle cat that was sitting with its front paws close, ears
pricked forward, preening and purring, making nice with the camera.
“Pretty cat,” Rick murmured finally, his voice oddly casual. The
“pretty cat” comment made me smile and made Beast huff with
something like possessive jealousy, which was amusing on all kinds
of levels.
Rick’s fingertips brushed the cat-claw scars on his
chest, an unconscious gesture. “It’s got green eyes and a round
pupil, like a human. Not cat eyes.”
Shock chased the contentment away. The sabertooth
lion that had almost killed him had had round pupils. Rick was
remembering. “Big-cats have a round pupil,” I said, my voice
sounding calm despite my speeding heart rate. “Housecats and some
smaller wildcats have a slit pupil.”
Rick grunted, eyes fixed on the screen, his tone
mild in counterpoint, as if saying, Well, how ’bout that.
“Turn it up.”
I did as he requested, and flipped to the BBC
channel where the were-cat news was on again, and Donald Cooper was
saying, “—quite keen on the hunt, he is, when in cat form.
Vegetarians and animal protection organizations the world over will
likely put out quite a stink at his diet, which is fresh meat on
the hoof, and, according to him, tastes better if he brings down
his prey with his were-teeth and claws.”
Beast agreed with the statement, sending me images
of a big-cat bringing down bigger prey. It was graphic and bloody
and beastly. Beast huffed with amusement and retreated back into
the darker parts of my mind.
Rick took his mug to the bed and sat, patting the
mattress. Over coffee-scent, I smelled tea steeping. He’d poured
hot water in the pot, over the leaves in the strainer. I smelled a
strong black I particularly loved, an organic Darjeeling first
flush that I would have all the time if I could, but at a hundred
twenty bucks a pound, it was too dear for regular drinking. This
pound was a gift from Rick, unexpected and generous and
thoughtful.
In the kitchen, I removed the leaves and joined him
in bed with my own mug, tea sweetened and topped with a dollop of
Cool Whip, and carrying a box of Krispy Kremes that had been Hot ’n
Now last night, and were still fresh enough to melt in my mouth. I
curled into the crook of his arm, not easy when there was no height
disparity, but not impossible for the truly determined. It was cozy
and warm and well established, as if we cuddled this way every day
instead of only when we could grab the time.
On some level I felt guilty for sleeping with Rick,
for being so homey and comfortable with him outside of marriage. My
housemother in the Christian children’s home where I grew up would
have chided me for it. A lot. It was that guilt that pricked me now
as I lay against him, watching the flickering screen. And that
guilt that I shoved away, deep inside, to worry about later. A lot
later.
Overhead, the rain’s metallic pattering grew into a
drumming roar. Rick turned the TV up another two notches and I
snuggled close to him, skin to skin, watching the events unfurl
across the globe as America woke to a world quite different from
the one they’d left behind in dreams. There was an unconscious
tension thrumming through Rick as he watched, and his hand strayed
often to his scars.
We had missed the interview with the black
were-leopard, but tuned in for an in-depth and politically astute
dialogue between Donald Cooper and Raymond Micheika, a rare African
were-lion who said he was the leader of the International
Association of Weres, and of the Party of African Weres. Rick
spelled out the acronym—PAW—and said he thought it was amusing,
while I thought it was disingenuous and too cute for the raw power
of the man. Raymond Micheika was an alpha predator, bigger than
Beast and twice as vicious.
I can be big, she reminded me smugly. The
I/we of Beast can be alpha male sabertooth. Kill any male big-cat
in personal challenge.
“Some cat species run, live, and hunt in packs,” I
murmured, to Rick as much as to Beast. “Take on one, I bet you take
on them all.”
Rick said, “Yeah. I’d hate to meet him in a dark
alley, especially with his cronies around. ‘We need a bigger gun,’”
he paraphrased the old Jaws movie, his voice tight in
contrast to the light words. I turned and watched his face. “If
there’s cats, then there’s gotta be other things,” he said, sipping
his coffee, his fingers still tracing his scars. “Maybe whatever
gorilla-type creature Big Foot is. Maybe that fish thing they see
in the Great Lakes. Werewolves,” Rick said. “The B-grade
movie variety.” He knew I was watching him, but he kept his gaze on
the TV, avoiding my eyes, not letting me in. He took a slow breath
and said the words that had been playing around inside his head.
“Sabertooth cats.” When I didn’t reply, he said, “Like the one that
got me. You killed it. And it changed back to human.”
“Part human,” I said, watching his face, my breath
tight, “part vamp, part sabertooth.”
“If they only change partway back when they die,
why haven’t we found any half-human skeletons?” His fingers
caressed his scars, his eyes glued to the TV, tension buzzing
through him, almost singing from him.
“He wasn’t a were,” I said slowly, knowing we were
straying perilously close to the word skinwalker.
“He was something else.” His hand slid from his
scars, his tension softening. That was what I liked most about
Rick, other than his sex-on-a-stick smile, his tats, and his
ability to let me do my job without being overly protective. He was
smart. He didn’t overanalyze things. He just ... accepted what
was.
“Yeah.”
The thing I liked least about him, however, was job
related—the fact that we couldn’t share much of our lives. So far,
though we’d been sleeping together for weeks, he hadn’t talked
about the attack that nearly killed him. He’d been undercover at
the time, and the story he had been told was that I had followed
him in human form, chased off the cat that had mauled him, and
later killed it. But his memories had to include two cats, not one.
Someday we’d have to address that. Someday we had to address a lot
of things, if our relationship was to continue.
I sipped my tea, waiting, giving him a chance to
draw whatever conclusions he might be heading toward. He opened his
mouth, stopped, closed it. It was like missing a step in a dance.
As if something had gone astray, been omitted, and I had no idea
what.
A half beat later, Rick indicated the TV with his
mug and veered the subject onto a different course, his tone
forced, but lighter, his voice the cop-tone he used when he was
telling something he knew for fact. “That’s a slick bit of video.
This wasn’t filmed fast and dumped on the airwaves. They spent time
with it, which means the BBC’s known about weres for a
while.”
I shifted slightly to see his face better. But he
didn’t look my way. “And?” I asked, trying to read his body
language, recognizing the slight trace of adrenaline leaching from
his pores.
“There’s no way they could keep it totally under
wraps. Word probably got out that it was going to hit the airwaves.
And whatever weres we have in the U.S. will have been informed it
was going to break and will make a statement. Fast.” He said it
like a pronouncement rather than just guessing.
When Rick was undercover, he had been investigating
the vamps, and though he’d been outed to them, any weres ...
Crap. Any weres would never know he was a cop. He could fit
in anywhere, which had made him so good undercover. And Rick had
been mostly unavailable for the last couple of weeks, appearing for
quick breakfast dates, late-night dinners, and for this trip into
the mountains to move me to New Orleans. Suddenly I realized why
Rick had been working undercover. It had something to do with
weres.
My cold chills returned, lifting my skin in tight
points as if my pelt rose. Beast rumbled inside, watching Rick,
curious, focused, like a kitten watching a fluffy toy twisting on
the end of a string, not sure if attack was warranted. I breathed
in through my open mouth, Beast-like. The scent of his body was
like the color of daffodils, yellow and tart. Rick did know
something.
He took a donut and ate it in three bites, washing
it down with coffee. “This announcement,” he said, sounding more
certain than prophetic, “will be followed with one of several
reactions.” He licked the sugar from a finger and held it up. “One.
The press will go wild. That’s axiomatic, actually.” He held up
another finger. “Two. More weres’ll come out of the closet. Three.
The white supremacists and the xenophobic human extremists’ll join
hands and vow to hunt down and exterminate the nonhumans.”
“And they call you a glass-is-half-full kinda guy.”
I could hear the low timbre of concern in my voice.
“Hey, I’m an optimist, babe,” Rick said. But he
still hadn’t taken his eyes off the TV; he still hadn’t looked at
me. He chuckled and took another donut, gesturing with it. “It’s
gonna be a zoo. You know. Wild animals. Zoo.”
I made the requisite groan over the humor. “You
know something, don’t you?”
He lifted a shoulder, noncommittal.
Apprehension started to churn in the pit of my
stomach, heavy, bitter tasting, a dark, recirculating whirlpool of
possibilities. Wondering what he knew. Wondering if—okay, hoping
that—skinwalkers would come out with the weres. Hoping that I
finally wouldn’t be alone. And worrying what Rick might do
when—if—he learned he had been sleeping with one. “Pretty
cat,” he’d said of the black were-leopard, as if he had liked
it. But it was a heck of a lot easier to be blasé about a theory;
it might be quite different in a relationship reality. And, last,
wondering what he had been doing undercover with weres.
I hadn’t smelled anything on him, but his sisters
had cats, and there were at least a dozen barn cats at his parents’
place. If he’d been with were-cats, I might not have noticed.
Back on the BBC, Donald was chatting with the
big-cat, Kemnebi, once again in human form, about how he became a
cat, the interview we had missed. The were-cat spoke English, the
dialect one of those liquid African accents that flowed like water
down stone. “We reproduce much as human do, mating and having baby.
But we have litter, some small, some large, some with cat baby that
have potential to change to human, some with human baby that have
potential to change to cat. Some with both. Potential is there,
ready to be awakened.”
“You don’t bite to make a were-cat?” the anchor
asked, clearly surprised.
“No. To bite a human, even in self-defense, is
against all of our laws,” he said, his black-skinned face
compelling. “To bite a human, hoping to turn him into one of us, is
a death sentence. We may not mate with human, for fear of passing
the contagion. For this crime, there is no mercy.”
Rick started to speak and stopped. A broken instant
later he said, “Jodi’s gonna love adding that to the woo-woo
files.” Jodi is Rick’s boss, in charge of all paranormal
investigations in the party city of the South. “Especially the part
about a human-shaped mother giving birth to a litter of kittens and
humans all at the same time.”
I didn’t reply. We watched, switching channels
between the networks and the cable stations as the sky lightened
outside, despite the din of rain. We didn’t talk, though I wanted
to ask questions, wanted to know what Rick was thinking. I had a
feeling that a normal girl would have been pumping him for answers
about his were-knowledge. But I had no idea what to ask or how to
do it. Unlike most girls, I hadn’t spent my early years absorbing
the social interactions between humans. Impossible to do while
living inside the body of a mountain lion; nearly as hard to do
while living in a children’s home, the amnesiac outsider with no
English and no past. So I sat on the bed, my shoulder under Rick’s,
snuggled close, with him, but alone.
Near six a.m., Rick changed to FOX, which was
running an interview purported to be with one of the leaders of the
U.S. werewolves, the Lupus Clan, based in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
“What’d I tell you?” Rick said. We’d slid down in the bed, under
the covers, mugs replenished and a box of cereal open between us as
we ate it, dry. “Werewolves. B-grade movie version.” The
purported wolfman was muscled but slender, strawberry blond,
tough-looking, aggressive, angry, gesticulating in a hostile
manner, his words being bleeped as he cursed at the reporter.
Rick said, “Bet it’d tick him off to hear this, but
he’s mean as a pit bull.”
It struck me as funny and I chuckled, mostly in
relief. Rick slanted me a grin and I snorted, feeling better,
though not sure why. On TV, the pit bull/werewolf was still going
at it.
“He stands about six feet tall,” Rick mused, “and
probably one eighty. How big do you think he’d be as a wolf?” There
was something odd about his tone, but then there was something odd
about Rick today altogether, so I didn’t know how to categorize
this new odd.
“If the law of conservation of mass and energy
holds true,” I said, thinking about what happened when I shifted
into any animal that genetically might equal my body mass, “then
he’d be a wolf weighing in at one eighty.” Rick looked at me in
surprise. “What?” I asked. “I took physics in high school.”
“So did I but I’d never remember the name of a law.
I didn’t know you had a brain,” he said, teasing. I made a fist and
mimed socking him. He took my fist and kissed my fingers, one at
time, which had my toes curling. I gripped his hand, holding it
tightly, as if it might disappear. As if he might disappear.
“Besides,” Rick said, his lips moving against my knuckles, “it’s
magic. Why would the physical laws hold true?”
“Why wouldn’t they? Those black motes that floated
around him when he changed looked like sparks of some kind, which
is energy.” I muted the TV and rolled over so I could look up at
him, and so he’d have better access to my fingers and any other
parts of me he might want to reach, wanting to touch him, wanting
him to touch me. I slid my other hand up his arm, his skin warm
against my palm. “When the man became a black were-leopard, the cat
looked big enough to weigh one eighty.”
“So if a fat guy got turned into a were, he’d be a
fat were?”
I laughed at the mental image of a pudgy black
leopard, rolls of fat undulating as he walked. Beast showed fangs,
not amused. “No. Remember, that Micheika guy said the caloric
requirements of shifting were enormous.”
“So fat people could get bitten by a were and lose
weight every time the moon was full.”
“You’re a funny guy. Funny, funny guy.” But the
mundane dull chitchat and the texture of his skin had relaxed me.
“They get killed for biting a human. Not a good way to promote
weight loss.”
“There is that. And they go furry once a month.
Hard to hold down a job with that.” Rick returned his attention to
the TV and switched between news channels to stop on CNN again,
where they were playing an early-morning telephone interview with a
Texas senator named Jones about the “problem with the supernatural
creatures in our midst,” as he put it. Jones, his speech pattern
stolen from small-town Southern Baptist preachers, said, “In
species that live for cent-u-ries instead of decades,
of what use are stat-utes of lim-i-ta-tion? And, how long is
a life sentence for vampires, who live decades longer
than real humans? How will we deal with the cost to the
prison system in terms of prison cells that will be occupied
for cent-u-ries? In terms of feeding the
bloodsuckers? Keeping them safe from the sun? In terms of
the confinement requirements to hold a
creature that is so much stronger than humans. How do
we control the foul things?”
“For vamps, you hire a vamp-killer,” I said to the
screen, “and give them true-death, according to Mithran Law. Human
law can’t apply. Which Congress will figure out sooner or
later.”
“They haven’t so far,” Rick said, cynical and
disparaging, “and it’s playing havoc with the legal system.”
Just to round out the hater of nonhumans, Jones
added, “And these witches. The Holy Scriptures tells us that
we ‘must not suffer a witch to live.’” He raised a finger toward
the sky. “Our great coun-try has already fallen far from
God’s i-deal by allowing—”
Rick lowered the volume and switched through the
news channels, the TV glare flashing with each channel jump. He
said, “Even money says Jones likes small boys, and that he’ll
propose a law that allows law enforcement officers to shoot first
and ask questions later when it comes to weres, vamps, and
witches.”
“Did you hear that?” I rolled back upright and took
the remote, found the channel and raised the volume on the TV to
hear the wolfman say, “... killed my grandfather, Henri Molyneux,
and stole our hunting territory from us. Murder and grand theft.”
He snarled, “I can prove Leo Pellissier is guilty of it. And”—he
glared into the TV camera—“there’s no statute of limitations on
murder.”
“Oh crap,” I muttered, seeing a sidebar photo of
Leo, vampire Master of the City of New Orleans, dressed in a
tuxedo, looking gorgeous and suave and anything but dangerous. I’d
seen him wearing his other face, his vamped-out, creepy, and
dangerous as a rabid wolf face. Though the wolf thought may not be
politically acceptable now.
Rick laughed, half mocking, slanting his eyes at
me. “Vacation’s over,” he said. “Your boss is accused of murder.
You know he’ll want his pet rogue-vamp killer at his side.” He
looked at the time on the screen. “It’s ten minutes to dawn. He’ll
call. Five bucks.” He held out his hand to shake on the offered
bet.
“You knew all about this,” I accused. Rick
shrugged, not denying it. “And you offer me awful bets,” I
grumbled. “No, thanks.” Five minutes later, my new cell phone
chirped. Rick rolled out of bed, hunting up his clothes.
I answered the phone, which displayed Leo
Pellissier’s private number.