Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [877]
Each white door had a silver number on its surface. Again like a very discreet hotel. We were looking for room nine. There was absolutely no sound from behind the doors. The only noises I heard were the distant thud of the music downstairs and the faint whisper of leather and vinyl—our body movements. I’d never been so aware of how loud small noises could be. Maybe it was the eerie silence of the hallway, or maybe I’d gained something new from the marriage of the marks. Better hearing wouldn’t be a bad thing, would it? So many of the “gifts” from the vampire marks tended to be double-edged swords, at best.
I shook off the gloomy thoughts and walked with my foursome of bodyguards down the carpeted hallway. I was trusting them to give their lives for mine. That’s what a bodyguard does. Jamil had taken two shotgun blasts for me last summer. It hadn’t been silver shot, so he’d healed, but he hadn’t known that when he put himself between the gun barrel and me. Sylvie owed me one, and a woman her size doesn’t get to be second in the pack hierarchy without being one tough werewolf. I didn’t really trust the vampires to give up their undead lives for me. It’s been my experience that the longer something semi-immortal lives, the more tightly it hugs its existence. So I counted on the wolves, and knew I could work around the vampires. It didn’t matter that Jean-Claude trusted them. It mattered that I didn’t. I’d have preferred to just bring along more werewolves, except if I showed up with nothing but wolves at my back, it would be like saying that I couldn’t do this without Richard’s pack. Not true. Or not completely true. We’d see how deep the shit was once we opened the door.
Room nine was nearly at the end of the long hallway. The building had been a warehouse, and the upstairs had simply been divided into long hallways with huge rooms scattered along them. Jamil was standing to one side of the door. Faust was standing in front of it. Not smart.
I stood to the other side of the door and said, “Faust, the werehyenas had to take guns off these guys.”
The vampire raised an arched eyebrow at me.
“They may not have found all the guns,” I said.
He still looked at me.
I sighed. Over a hundred years of “life,” power enough to be a master vamp, and he was still an amateur. “It would be bad to be standing in the center of the door when a shotgun blast went off on the other side.”
He blinked, and a little of that humor leaked away, showing that arrogance that most vamps acquire. “I think Narcissus would have found a shotgun.”
I leaned my shoulder against the wall and smiled at him. “Do you know what a cop-killer is?”
He raised both eyebrows at me. “A person who kills policemen.”
“No, it’s a type of ammunition designed to go through body armor. The cops have no defense against it. You can carry armor-piercing bullets in handguns, Faust. I used the shotgun as an example, but it could be so many things. And they would all take out your heart, most of your spine, or all of your head, depending on where the shooter was aiming.”
“Get out of the fucking doorway,” Meng Die said.
He turned and looked at her, and it was not a friendly look. “You are not my master.”
“Nor you mine,” she said.
“Children,” I said. They both looked at me. Great. “Faust if you’re not going to be helpful then go back downstairs.”
“What did I do?”
I glanced at Meng Die, shrugged, and said, “Get out of the fucking doorway.”
I could see his shoulders tighten, but he gave a graceful bow at odds with the burgundy hair and leather. “As Jean-Claude’s lady wishes, so shall it be.” He stepped to the side closest to me. Sylvie moved up close to me, not exactly between us, but close. It made me feel better. Bossing around vampires was always chancy. You never knew when they’d try to boss back. I really, really wanted my gun back.
“What now?” Jamil asked. He was watching the vampires like he wasn’t any happier with their company than I was. All good bodyguards are paranoid. It goes with the job.
“I guess we knock.” I kept