Circus of the Damned - Laurell K. Hamilton [0]
Circus of the Damned
A Jove Book / published by arrangement with the author
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1995 by Laurell K. Hamilton
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ISBN: 1-101-14657-5
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Electronic edition: February, 2004
Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter books by Laurell K. Hamilton
GUILTY PLEASURES
THE LAUGHING CORPSE
CIRCUS OF THE DAMNED
THE LUNATIC CAFE
BLOODY BONES
THE KILLING DANCE
BURNT OFFERINGS
BLUE MOON
OBSIDIAN BUTTERFL Y
NARCISSUS IN CHAINS
To Ginjer Buchanan, our editor, whose faith in Anita and patience with me have been most appreciated
Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
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19
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22
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26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
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47
48
49
MOVING THINGS AROUND
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
TO THE USUAL SUSPECTS: my husband, J., and the alternate historians M. C. Sumner, Deborah Millitello, Marella Sands, and Robert K. Sheaff. Good luck in the new house, Bob. We’ll miss you much.
1
THERE WAS DRIED CHICKEN blood imbedded under my fingernails. When you raise the dead for a living, you have to spill a little blood. It clung in flaking patches to my face and hands. I’d tried to clean the worst of it off before coming to this meeting, but some things only a shower would fix. I sipped coffee from a personalized mug that said, “Piss me off, pay the consequences,” and stared at the two men sitting across from me.
Mr. Jeremy Ruebens was short, dark, and grumpy. I’d never seen him when he wasn’t either frowning or shouting. His small features were clustered in the middle of his face as if some giant hand had mashed them together before the clay had dried. His hands smoothed over the lapel of his coat, the dark blue tie, tie clip, white shirt collar. His hands folded in his lap for a second, then began their dance again: coat, tie, tie clip, collar, lap. I figured I could stand to watch him fidget maybe five more times before I screamed for mercy and promised him anything he wanted.
The second man was Karl Inger. I’d never met him before. He was a few inches over six feet. Standing, he had towered over Ruebens and me. A wavy mass of short-cut red hair graced a large face. He had honest-to-god muttonchop sideburns that grew into one of the fullest mustaches I’d ever seen. Everything was neatly trimmed except for his unruly hair. Maybe he was having a bad hair day.
Ruebens’s hands were making their endless dance for the fourth time. Four was my limit.
I wanted to go around the desk, grab his hands, and yell, “Stop that!” But I figured that was a little rude, even for me. “I don’t remember you being this twitchy, Ruebens,” I said.
He glanced at me. “Twitchy?”
I motioned at his hands, making their endless circuit. He frowned and placed his hands on top of his thighs. They remained there, motionless. Self-control at its best.
“I am not twitchy, Miss Blake.”
“It’s Ms. Blake. And why are you so nervous, Mr. Ruebens?” I sipped my coffee.
“I am not accustomed to asking for help from people like you.”
“People like me?” I made it a question.