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Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [430]

By Root 4275 0
it was anything else, I’d call in the state cops, but not tonight. Not unless they dragged out a screaming victim. If they did that, then all bets were off.

I shook my head. “What could possibly be wrong?” I said. I walked into the clearing, going for our own little group. It looked as if all three groups had the same amount of people. That was pretty typical of a meet between preternatural groups. You always negotiated your entourage.

Richard stood and came to meet me. I took his hand when he offered it, but strangely, right at that moment, I didn’t care if he was wearing his shirt or not. I was angry at him. Angry at him for not preparing me for this place. Maybe he thought that nothing shocked me anymore, or maybe. . . oh, hell, I didn’t know, but he’d screwed up again.

So I let him hold my hand, and the touch of his flesh meant nothing. I was too confused and working too hard on holding my temper to be seduced right then.

“Take the jacket off, child; let’s get a look at what you’ve got,” a voice said.

I turned, slowly, to look at the owner of that voice.

The vampire had hair that I would have called golden if I hadn’t had Asher’s hair to compare it to. The hair was cut short, all over. His eyes could have been blue or grey in the uncertain light. The face had frozen before he’d ever hit twenty. Still young enough that his face was thin and smooth, as if he’d died before he’d been able to grow a decent beard.

He had the face of a child on a tall, gangly frame, as if he’d been awkward in life. He wasn’t awkward as he stood. He came to his feet in a movement so smooth it looked like dancing. He stood, and the black-eyed vamp stood with him, coming to his side in a motion of long practice like they were two parts of a whole.

There was one human woman among the eight of them. She looked like pure Native American with waist-length hair that was as true black as my own. Hers was straight and thick. Her skin was a dark brown, face almost square, with large, brown eyes that had lashes so thick that even from a distance they were noticeable. If she wore any makeup, I couldn’t tell. She was one of those women that is striking rather than beautiful, too strong featured for conventional prettiness, but you wouldn’t forget the face once you saw it.

“Come on, girl, strip off,” that young face said. “We’ve seen most everything everybody else has. I will be mighty disappointed if I don’t get to see your goodies, too.”

The woman’s face remained marvelously blank, but there was a tightness to those strong shoulders, a slight turn to that long line of neck. She didn’t seem to be enjoying the show.

Richard’s hand tightened around mine. I thought at first he was trying to warn me not to get mad, but one glance at his face, and it was the other way around. He was getting pissed. The night would go downhill pretty damn fast if I was supposed to be the calm one.

“Are you always this offensive, or am I getting a special treat?” I asked.

He laughed, but it was just a laugh, ordinary, human. He couldn’t do the voice tricks that Jean-Claude and even Asher could do. Of course, Colin had other talents. I’d seen those other talents carved in Nathaniel’s chest.

Asher stood. He’d started the evening wearing satin a pale icy blue only two shades darker than his white-blue eyes. The jacket had darker blue embroidery at the sleeves and lapels. It fastened with one of those cloth loops over a large, silk-covered button. The pants matched the jacket perfectly. He’d tried the jacket on with no shirt. His chest had been very visible. The scars had seemed harsher against the soft blue cloth. He’d stared at himself in the room’s only mirror for a long time. He’d finally put a white silk shirt on under the jacket.

Now that white shirt was in tatters. It looked like gigantic claws had ripped at it. His chest showed very plainly through the ruined cloth. There was no blood. I’d only seen three vampires that could cause harm from a distance. One of them had been a member of their council. But none of them had had the delicacy of control to shred

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