Circus of the Damned - Laurell K. Hamilton [14]
Goosebumps prickled up the back of my neck, creeping into my hair. I shivered while I stood there and sweated in the heat. What was in the basket? The barker outside had said a giant cobra, but there was no snake in the world that needed a basket that big. Not even the anaconda, the world’s heaviest snake, needed a container over ten feet tall and twenty feet wide.
Something touched my shoulder. I jumped and spun. Stephen was standing nearly touching me, smiling.
I swallowed my pulse back into my throat and glared at him. I make a big deal about not wanting him at my back, then let him sneak up behind me. Real swift, Anita, real swift. Because he’d scared me, I was mad at him. Illogical, but it was better to be mad than scared.
“Jean-Claude’s just inside,” he said. He smiled, but there was a very human glint of laughter in his blue eyes.
I scowled at him, knowing I was being childish, and not caring. “After you, fur-face.”
The laughter slipped away. He was very serious as he stared at me. “How did you know?” His voice was uncertain, fragile. A lot of lycanthropes pride themselves on being able to pass for human.
“It was easy,” I said. Which wasn’t entirely true, but I wanted to hurt him. Childish, unattractive, honest.
His face suddenly looked very young. His eyes filled with uncertainty and pain.
Shit.
“Look, I’ve spent a lot of time around shapeshifters. I just know what to look for, okay?” Why did I want to reassure him? Because I knew what it was like to be the outsider. Raising the dead makes a lot of people class me with the monsters. There are even days when I agree with them.
He was still staring at me, with his hurt feelings like an open wound in his eyes. If he started to cry, I was leaving.
He turned without another word and walked through the open door. I stared at the door for a minute. There were gasps, screams from the crowd. I whirled and saw it. It was a snake, but it wasn’t just the world’s biggest cobra, it was the biggest freaking snake I’d ever seen. Its body was banded in dull greyish black and off-white. The scales gleamed under the lights. The head was at least a foot and a half wide. No snake was that big. It flared its hood, and it was the size of a satellite dish. The snake hissed, flicking out a tongue that was like a black whip.
I’d had a semester of herpetology in college. If the snake had been a mere eight feet or less, I would have called it a banded Egyptian cobra. I couldn’t remember the scientific name to save myself.
The woman dropped to the ground in front of the snake, forehead to the ground. A mark of obedience from her to the snake. To her god. Sweet Jesus.
The woman stood and began to dance, and the cobra watched her. She’d made herself a living flute for the nearsighted creature to follow. I didn’t want to see what would happen if she messed up. The poison wouldn’t have time to kill her. The fangs were so damn big they’d spear her like swords. She’d die of shock and blood loss long before the poison kicked in.
Something was growing in the middle of that ring. Magic crawled up my spine. Was it magic that kept the snake safe, or magic that called it up, or was it the snake itself? Did it have power all its own? I didn’t even know what to call it. It looked like a cobra, perhaps the world’s biggest, yet I didn’t even have a word for it. God with a little “g” would do, but it wasn’t accurate.
I shook my head and turned away. I didn’t want to see the show. I didn’t want to stand there with its magic flowing soft and cold over my skin. If the snake wasn’t safe, Jean-Claude would have had it caged, right? Right.
I turned away from the snake charmer and the world’s biggest cobra. I wanted to talk to