Obsidian Butterfly - Laurell K. Hamilton [73]
“I know a vampire kill when I see it, Anita, and this isn’t one.”
I waved my hands in the air as if clearing it. “I’m just throwing out examples, Edward. Even a demon couldn’t do this.”
“How about a devil?” he asked.
I looked at him, saw he was serious, so I gave him a serious answer. “I won’t go into how long it’s been since anyone saw a devil, a greater demon, above ground, but if it were anything demonic, I’d have felt it today in the house. The demonic leave a stain behind, Edward.”
“Couldn’t one that was powerful enough hide its presence from you?”
“Probably,” I said. “I’m not a priest, so probably, but whatever is mutilating these people doesn’t want to hide.” I shook my head. “It’s not demonic, I’d almost bet the farm on it, but again I’m not a demonologist.”
“I know that Donna can help us locate a witch tomorrow. I don’t think she knows any demonologists.”
“There are only two in the country. Father Simon McCoupen, who has the record in this century in this country for number of exorcisms performed, and Doctor Philo Merrick, who teaches at the University of San Francisco.”
“You sound like you know them,” Edward said.
“I attended a class taught by Merrick, and a talk given by Father Simon.”
“I didn’t know you were that interested in demons.”
“Let’s just say that I’m tired of running into them without knowing much about them.”
He looked at me, sort of expectantly. “When did you run into a demon?”
I shook my head. “I won’t talk about it after dark. If you really want to know, ask me again tomorrow when the sun is shining.”
He looked at me for a second or two, as if he wanted to argue, but he let it go. Which was just as well. There are some stories, some memories, that if you tell them after dark, they seem to gain weight, substance, as if there are things listening, waiting to hear themselves spoken of again. Words have power. But even thinking about them is sometimes enough to make the air in a room heavy. I’d gotten better over the years at turning off my memories. It was a way to stay sane.
“The list of what our murderer isn’t is getting longer,” Edward said. “Now tell me what it is.”
“I don’t know yet, but it is preternatural.” I leafed through the pages until I found the part I’d marked. “Four of the people now in the Santa Fe hospital were only found because they wondered outside their homes at night, skinned and bleeding. Neighbors found them both times.”
“There’s a transcript of the 911 call somewhere in this mess. The woman who found the Carmichaels had hysterics over the phone.”
I thought about what I’d seen in the hospital and tried to imagine finding one of my neighbors, perhaps a friend, in that condition in the middle of the street. I shook my head and chased the image back. I did not want to imagine it. I had enough nightmares of my own, thank you very much.
“I don’t blame her,” I said. “But my point is this: how could they walk around in that condition? One of the survivors attacked his neighbor when the man came to help. He bit his shoulder so badly that the man was taken to the hospital with the mutilation victims. Doctor Evans said that they have to restrain all the patients in Albuquerque or they try to get up and leave. Don’t you find that strange?”
“Yes, it’s all strange. Is there a point in here somewhere?” And I heard that thread of tiredness in his voice.
“I think that whatever skinned them was, is, calling them.”
“Calling them how?” he asked.
“The same way a vampire calls a person he’s bitten and mind-raped. The skinning or something about it gives the monster a hold over them.”
“Why doesn’t the monster just take them with him the night he skins them?” Edward asked.
“I don’t know.”
“Can you prove that the skinned victims are being called by some bogeyman?”
“No, but if the doctors would okay it, I wonder where one of the survivors would go, if no one stopped him. Maybe the mutilation victims could lead us right to the thing.”
“You saw the hospital today, Anita. They are not going to let us take one of their patients and set him free. Between you