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Circus of the Damned - Laurell K. Hamilton [53]

By Root 720 0
tasted like blood—thick, warm, faintly salty. There was an underlying sourness where the upper intestine and stomach had been broken open. Fresh death smells like a cross between a slaughterhouse and an outhouse. Shit and blood is what death smells like.

Zerbrowski was scanning the hallway, borrowed gun in hand. He had four bullets. I had thirteen, plus an extra clip in my sport bag. Where was the second guard’s gun?

“Where’s her gun?” I asked.

Zerbrowski’s eyes flicked to me, then to the corpse, then back to scanning the hallway. “I don’t see it.”

I’d never met a vampire that used a gun, but there was always a first time. “Dolph, where’s the guard’s gun?”

Dolph knelt in the blood and tried to search the body. He moved the bloody flesh and pieces of cloth around, like you’d stir it with a spoon. Once the sight would have made me lose my lunch, but it didn’t now. Was it a bad sign that I didn’t throw up on the corpses anymore? Maybe.

“Spread out, look for the gun,” Dolph said.

The four uniforms spread out and searched. The blond was pasty and swallowed convulsively, but he was making it. Good for him. It was the tall one with the prominent Adam’s apple that broke first. He slid on a piece of meat that set him down hard on his butt in a pool of congealed blood. He scrambled to his knees and vomited against the wall.

I was breathing quick, shallow breaths. The blood and carnage hadn’t been enough, but the sound of someone else throwing up just might be.

I pressed my shoulders into the wall and moved towards the next corner. I will not throw up. I will not throw up. Oh, God, please don’t let me throw up. Have you ever tried to aim a gun while throwing your guts up? It’s damn near impossible. You’re helpless until you’re finished. After seeing the guards, I didn’t want to be helpless.

The blond cop was leaning against the wall. His face was shiny with a sick sweat. He looked at me and I could read it in his eyes. “Don’t,” I whispered, “please don’t.”

The rookie fell to his knees and that was it. I lost everything I’d eaten that day. At least I didn’t throw up on the corpse. I’d done that once, and Zerbrowski had never let me live it down. On that particular case, the complaint was that I’d tampered with evidence.

If I’d been the vampire, I would have come then while half of us were vomiting our guts out. But nothing slithered around the corner. Nothing came screaming out of the darkness. Lucky us.

“If you’re all done,” Dolph said, “we need to find her gun and what did this.”

I wiped my mouth on the sleeve of my coveralls. I was sweating, but there hadn’t been time to take them off. My black Nikes stuck to the floor with little squeech sounds. There was blood on the bottom of my shoes. Maybe the coveralls weren’t such a bad idea.

What I wanted was a cool cloth. What I got was to continue down the green hallway, making little bloody footprints behind me. I scanned the floor and there it was, footprints going away from the body, back down the hall towards the first guard.

“Dolph?”

“I see them,” he said.

The faint footprints walked through the carnage and down the corner, away from us. Away sounded good, but I knew better. We were here to get up close and personal. Dammit.

Dolph knelt by the largest piece of the body. “Anita.”

I walked over to him, avoiding the bloody footprints. Never step on clues. The police don’t like it.

Dolph pointed at a blackened piece of cloth. I knelt carefully, glad that I was still in my coveralls. I could kneel in all the blood I wanted without messing my clothes. Always prepared, like a good Boy Scout.

The woman’s shirt was charred and blackened. Dolph touched the material with the tip of his pencil. The cloth flaked in heavy layers, cracking like stale bread. Dolph poked a hole through one of the layers. It crumbled. A burst of ash and a sharp acrid smell came up from the body.

“What the hell happened to her?” Dolph asked.

I swallowed, still tasting vomit at the back of my throat. This wasn’t helping. “It’s not cloth.”

“What is it, then?”

“Flesh.”

Dolph just looked at me.

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