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Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Colletion_ Books 6-10 - Laurell K. Hamilton [918]

By Root 4022 0
towards Detective Arnet that made her eyes sparkle. Nathaniel’s real-life job was as a stripper, so he flirted instinctively. He seemed both aware and unaware of his effect on women. When he concentrated, he understood what he was doing. But when he simply walked into a room and heads turned, he was oblivious.

I touched his arm. “Say good-bye to the nice detectives. We’ve got to hurry.”

He said, “Good-bye, nice detectives.” I gave him a small push towards the doors.

Zerbrowski followed us out. I think if Nathaniel hadn’t been with us he’d have asked more questions. But he’d never met Nathaniel and wasn’t sure of him. So we moved in silence to the Prisoner Processing, where Jean-Claude was sitting on one of the three chairs. Normally the processing area was full of people coming in, going out, and since its the size of a walk-in closet, that makes it seem crowded. The two vending machines took up room, but except for the prisoner processing clerk—the new name since turnkey fell out of fashion—behind his little barred bankteller window, the place was deserted. But it was 3:30 in the morning.

Jean-Claude rose when he saw me; his white shirt was stained, torn on one sleeve. He didn’t look like he’d been beaten, or hurt. But he was usually a fanatic about his clothes. Only something drastic would have changed that. A struggle perhaps?

I did not run to him, but I did wrap my arms around him, press my ear to his chest, hold on to him as if he were the last solid thing in the world. He stroked my hair and murmured to me in French. I understood enough to know he was glad to see me and that he thought I looked beautiful. But beyond that it was just pretty noise.

It wasn’t until I felt Zerbrowski behind me that I pulled away, but when Jean-Claude’s hand found mine, I welcomed it.

Zerbrowski was looking at me as if he’d never seen me before. “What?” It came out hostile.

“I’ve never seen you be that . . . soft with anyone before.”

It startled me. “You’ve seen me kiss Richard before.”

He nodded. “That was lust. This is . . .” He shook his head, glancing up at Jean-Claude, then back to me. “He makes you feel safe.”

I realized with a jolt that he was right. “You’re smarter than you look, Zerbrowski.”

“Katie reads self-help books to me. I just look at the pictures.” He touched my right hand. “I’ll talk to Dolph.”

“I don’t think it’s going to help,” I said.

He shrugged. “If Orlando King can have a conversion experience where the monsters are concerned, anybody can.”

“What do you mean?” I asked.

“Have you ever read, or seen, any of his interviews before his accident?” Zerbrowski made little quote marks with his fingers when he said accident.

“No. That was before I was interested in the topic, I think.”

He frowned at me. “I keep forgetting, you were still in diapers then.”

I just shook my head. “So tell me.”

“King was one of the shining lights behind trying to get lycanthropes declared nonhuman, so they could be executed just for existing, without a trial. Then he got cut up, and, lo and behold, he mellowed.”

“Nearly dying will do that to you, Zerbrowski.”

He grinned at me. “It didn’t make me a better man.” I’d held my hands over his stomach, kept his insides from spilling out, while we waited for an ambulance. It had happened just before Christmas about two years ago. Zerbrowski alive and well had been all I put on my list to Santa that year.

“If Katie couldn’t make you a better man, then nothing could,” I said.

He grinned wider, then his face sobered. “I’ll talk to the boss for you, see if I can get him to mellow without a near-death experience.”

I looked up into his serious face. “Just because you saw me hug Jean-Claude?”

“Yeah.”

I gave Zerbrowski a quick hug. “Thank you.”

He pushed me back towards Jean-Claude. “Better get him under wraps before dawn.” He looked past me to the vampire. “Take care of her.”

Jean-Claude gave a small bow from his neck. “I will take care of her as much as she allows it.”

Zerbrowski laughed. “Oh, he does know you.”

We left with Zerbrowski laughing, the clerk staring, and the night

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