Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [308]
“You assumed I knew?” he said.
“Yeah.”
“I have noticed the daily lectures have been in short supply lately. I used to take more notes at work with you than I ever did in college.”
“Not so many notes lately, huh?” I said.
“No, I hadn’t really thought about it, but no.” He grinned suddenly and it lit up his eyes, chased away the horrors of the day. For a moment he was the bright-eyed, optimistic kid who had first shown up on my doorstep. “You mean I’m finally learning how to do the job?”
“Yeah,” I said, “you are. In fact, if you were quicker on the trigger, I’d say you were good at it. It’s just hard to learn everything, Larry. Something comes up and you find out you really don’t know what the hell’s going on after all.”
“You, too?” he said.
“Me, too.”
He took a deep breath and let it out. “I’ve seen you surprised a time or two, Anita. When the monsters get so strange that you don’t know what’s going either, it usually gets real nasty, real last.”
He was right. I wished he wasn’t, because right now I didn’t know what the hell was going on. I didn’t understand what had happened with Nathaniel. I didn’t know how the marks worked with Richard. I didn’t know how to find out if Malcolm was still among the undead, or if he’d crossed into that more permanent state of true death. In fact I had so many questions and so few answers that I just wanted to go home. Maybe Larry and I could both take a pain pill and sleep until tomorrow. Surely tomorrow would be a better day. God, I hoped so.
41
THE HOUSE WAS still smoking when we got there. Thin greyish wisps of smoke rose from the blackened beams like miniature ghosts. Some trick of the fire had left the high cupola on top of the building intact. The lower stories were gutted and blackened, but the cupola rose like a white beacon above the wreck. It looked like a black-toothed giant had taken a great bite out of the house.
The fire truck took up most of the narrow street. There was a spread of water seeping along the street like a shallow lake. Firefighters waded through the water, rolling up miles of hose over their shoulders. A uniformed police officer stopped us well back from the action.
I eased down my window and flashed my ID. It was a little plastic clip-on card and looked official, but it wasn’t a badge. Sometimes the uniforms would let me through, and sometimes they had to go ask permission. Brewster’s Law was going around Washington and would give vamp executioners what amounted to federal marshal status. I wasn’t sure how I felt about that. It takes a hell of a lot more to make a cop than just a badge, but for me personally I’d love to have had a badge to flash.
“Anita Blake, Larry Kirkland, to see Sergeant Storr.”
The officer frowned at the ID. “I’ll have to clear this with someone.”
I sighed. “Fine, we’ll wait here.”
The uniform went off in search of Dolph, and we waited.
“You used to argue with them,” Larry said.
I shrugged. “They’re just doing their job.”
“Since when has that stopped you from bitching?”
I looked at him. He was smiling, which saved him from the scathing comeback I had ready. Besides, it was nice to see him smiling about anything right now. “So I’m mellowing—a little. So what?”
The smile widened to a grin, a shit-eating grin, my uncle would have called it. It was like the next thing out of his mouth was almost too funny to say. I was betting I wouldn’t think it was funny at all.
“Is it being in love with Jean-Claude that’s mellowed you or the regular sex?”
I smiled sweetly. “Speaking of regular sex, how is Detective Tammy?”
He blushed first. I was happy.
The uniform was walking down the wet street towards us with Detective Tammy Reynolds in tow. Oh, life was good.
“Well, if it isn’t your little sugarplum now,” I said.
Larry saw her then. The red flush brightened to something the color of raw flame, redder than his hair. His blue eyes were a little bulgy with the effort to breathe. The soot had been wiped away, which saved his face from looking like a reddish