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Circus of the Damned - Laurell K. Hamilton [57]

By Root 687 0
I didn’t go any closer to check. I didn’t want to see the face. I’d been brave tonight. I had nothing left to prove.

The body was in one piece, barely. It looked like the vampire had shoved both hands into the chest, grabbed a handful of ribs, and pulled. The chest was nearly torn in two, but a band of pink muscle tissue and intestine held it together.

“The head’s got fangs,” Zerbrowski said.

“It’s the vampire counsellor,” I said.

“What happened?”

I shrugged. “At a guess, the counsellor was leaning over the vamp when it rose. It killed him, quick and messy.”

“Why’d it kill the vampire counsellor?” Dolph asked.

I shrugged. “It was more animal than human, Dolph. It woke up in a strange place with a strange vampire leaning over it. It reacted like any trapped animal and protected itself.”

“Why couldn’t the counsellor control it? That’s what he was here for.”

“The only person who can control an animalistic vampire is the master who made it. The counsellor wasn’t powerful enough to control it.”

“Now what?” John asked. He’d put up his gun. I still hadn’t. I felt better with it out for some reason.

“Now I go make my third animation appointment of the evening.”

“Just like that?”

I looked up at him, ready to be angry at somebody. “What do you want me to do, John? Fall into a screaming fit? That wouldn’t bring back the dead, and it would annoy the hell out of me.”

He sighed. “If you only matched your packaging.”

I put my gun back in the shoulder holster, smiled at him, and said, “Fuck you.”

Yeah, those are the words.

19

I HAD WASHED MOST of the blood off my face and hands in the bathroom at the morgue. The bloodstained coveralls were in my trunk. I was clean and presentable, or as presentable as I was going to get tonight. Bert had said to meet the new guy at my third appointment for the night. Oakglen Cemetery, ten o’clock. The theory was that the new man already raised two zombies and would just watch me raise the third one. Fine with me.

It was 10:35 before I pulled into Oakglen Cemetery. Late. Dammit. It’d make a great impression on the new animator, not to mention my client. Mrs. Doughal was a recent widow. Like five days recent. Her dearly departed husband had left no will. He’d always meant to get around to it, but you know how it is, just kept putting it off. I was to raise Mr. Doughal in front of two lawyers, two witnesses, the Doughals’ three grown children, and a partridge in a pear tree. They’d made a ruling just last month that the newly dead, a week or less, could be raised and verbally order a will. It would save the Doughals half their inheritance. Minus lawyer fees, of course.

There was a line of cars pulled over to the side of the narrow gravel road. The tires were playing hell with the grass, but if you didn’t park off to one side, nobody could use the road. Of course, how many people needed to use a cemetery road at 10:30 at night? Animators, voodoo priests, pot-smoking teenagers, necrophiliacs, satanists. You had to be a member of a legitimate religion and have a permit to worship in a cemetery after dark. Or be an animator. We didn’t need a permit. Mainly because we didn’t have a reputation for human sacrifice. A few bad apples have really given voodooists a bad name. Being Christian, I sort of frown on satanism. I mean, they are, after all, the bad guys. Right?

As soon as my foot hit the road, I felt it. Magic. Someone was trying to raise the dead, and they were very near at hand.

The new guy had already raised two zombies. Could he do a third? Charles and Jamison could only do two a night. Where had Bert found someone this powerful on such short notice?

I walked past five cars, not counting my own. There were nearly a dozen people pressed around the grave. The women were in skirt-suits; the men all wore ties. It was amazing how many people dressed up to come to the graveyard. The only reason most people come to the graveyard is for a funeral. A lot of clients dress for one, semi-formal, basic black.

It was a man’s voice leading the mourners in rising calls of, “Andrew Doughal,

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