Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [1116]
Chimera stepped beside me, and I moved just a little away from him. Movement caught my attention but it was only the hanging men swinging slowly from where Chimera had moved them. All of them bore marks of some kind; claws, blades, burns. One of them was missing his legs below the knees. I turned back to the man in front of me, and I knew I looked pale. I couldn’t help that. I hadn’t screamed. I hadn’t panicked, much. I couldn’t control the involuntary stuff. I was having enough trouble with the voluntary.
“Where are my leopards?” I asked, and my voice sounded almost normal. I got a zillion brownie points for that.
“Your leopard is here,” he said and moved to a heavy white curtain that took up almost all of the near wall. He pulled on a cord and the curtain parted. Behind it was an alcove, and Cherry was chained by her wrists and ankles to the stone wall. A leather ball gag filled her mouth. Her pale eyes were wide. Tears stained the dried blood on her face. Her face looked untouched, but the blood had come from somewhere.
“She’s healed everything we did to her,” Chimera said. Abuta the snake appeared at Chimera’s side, as if he’d been summoned. The bigger man stroked the snake man’s head, like you’d pet a dog that you liked a lot. “Abuta has shown quite a talent for this sort of thing.”
I swallowed hard and tried not to get angry. Anger wouldn’t help anyone. Help was coming. I just had to stall until it got here. I glanced around the room. There were men chained to the wall all the way around. I didn’t recognize any of them. There was a certain uniformity to them—youngish, or at least not old, well built, some slender, some muscular, all races, all physical types, all attractive. I wondered how long it had taken Narcissus to find this many good-looking men?
Micah wasn’t along the wall. The room in the Polaroid had looked more like the alcove that Cherry was in. I glanced at the still unopened part of the curtain. Was he behind there?
I had moved closer to Cherry without realizing it, because she made a small movement in her chains, and I startled. I turned back to find her looking at Chimera, not me. He hadn’t moved as far as I could see, but something he’d done had frightened her, and I finally realized what. His eyes has gone animal again, and that eerie smile was back. It was Chimera again, and call it a hunch, but I was betting he did most of the pain work for the other two personalities.
“Unchain her,” I said, like I was positive he’d do what I asked. I so wasn’t sure.
He reached out a hand towards her face, and I grabbed his wrist. “Unchain her.”
He smiled that unpleasant smile at me. “I’d hate to lose one of the only women we’ve got up here. Narcissus may go both ways, but he keeps the women out of his pack. Real spotted hyenas are matriarchal. He’s afraid if he brings women in that instinct will take over and he’ll lose his pack, because he’s not woman enough to keep it.”
“I always enjoy learning new zoological facts,” I said, “but let’s unchain Cherry and get her out of here.”
“But what of your lover? What of Micah?”
I met those mismatched animal eyes and fought to keep the fear out of my face. “I figured you were saving him for last, a sort of finale.” My voice had gone from calm to jaded. From the tone, you’d have thought that it didn’t matter to me one way or another, but I couldn’t stop my pulse from jumping in my neck.
His smile deepened, and I watched a human expression fill those animal eyes. Anticipation, anticipation of my pain, I think.
He opened the curtain slowly, revealing Micah chained by his wrists and ankles to the wall, just like Cherry. But unlike her, his wounds hadn’t healed. The right side of his face had been beaten badly. His eye was swollen completely shut, encrusted with dried blood. That delicate curve of jaw was so swollen it didn’t look real. The swelling had twisted his lip to one side. It was so swollen that I could see the pink inside of his mouth and glimpse teeth where his mouth no longer closed completely.
I heard a small sound, and it