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Authors: Laurell K. Hamilton

Blue Moon (9 page)

BOOK: Blue Moon
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Sirens wailed, coming quickly closer.

Baseball Bat fell forward onto his face. He never tried to catch himself. He was out for the count.

The only one of the bad guys standing was the tall man. Jason scrambled to his feet quickly enough to stay just ahead of the punches and kicks, but not well enough to hurt him back. Super strength does not mean super skill.

Shang-Da started to move in to help.

Jason looked at Shang-Da, and that was all the tall man needed. He landed a kick to the side of Jason's head that stunned him and left him on his knees on the ground. The man turned and I saw the roundhouse kick coming. It was a kick that could snap someone's neck. I was closer than Shang-Da. I didn't even
think about it. I moved forward and knew it wouldn't be in time. But the tall man saw the movement. He switched his attention from Jason to me.

I was suddenly in a defensive stance. He reversed the kick, and I managed to avoid it because he was off balance. There were two police cars skidding down the street towards us. Shang-Da stopped moving forward. I think we both thought the fight was over. The tall man thought otherwise.

The kick was just a blur of motion. I got one arm up in a partial block. My arm went numb and the next thing I knew, I was flat on my back staring up at the sky. It didn't even hurt.

He could have moved in and killed me, because for a second, I couldn't move. There was no sound for that frozen second, just me on the grass, blinking upward. Then I could hear my blood pounding in my ears. I took a deep gasping breath and I could hear human voices again.

A man's voice yelled, “Freeze, motherfucker!”

I tried to say, “Colorful,” but no sound came out. I could taste blood in my mouth. My face didn't hurt that much yet; I was sort of numb. I opened my mouth just to see if I could. I could. My jaw wasn't broken. Great. I raised one arm upward and managed to say, “Help me up.”

Jason said, “They've got guns pointed at us.”

Millie came down off the porch with her cane. She looked funny from my angle, like a fuzzy-footed giant. “Don't you be pointing guns at my grandson and his friends. These men attacked them.”

“Attacked them?” said a man's voice. “Looks like your ‘grandson' and his friends attacked them.”

I fumbled my ID out of my jacket pocket and held it up in the air. I could probably have sat up on my own, but since I'd taken a hit, I might as well use it. I was hurt, and the more hurt the cops thought I was, the less likely we'd be going to jail. If only the bad guys had been hurt, then we'd have all ended up in jail on assault charges or worse. I hadn't checked for pulses in at least two of the thugs. They'd been lying awfully still. This way we could all press assault charges. They could put us all in jail, or none in jail. Or that was the plan. As plans go, I'd had better ones. I was lucky my jaw wasn't broken.

“Anita Blake, vampire executioner,” I said. The announcement would have had a little more oomph if I hadn't been flat
on my back, but hey, you do what you can. I did roll onto one side. My mouth had filled with enough blood that I either had to spit or swallow. I spat onto the grass. Even rolling onto my side made the world spin. I wondered for a second or two if I was going to spit up more on the grass than just blood. The nausea passed, leaving me worried about a concussion. I'd had them before, and they usually made me sick to my stomach.

I couldn't see Millie anymore, but I could hear her. “You put up those guns, Billy Wilkes, or I will tan your hide with my cane.”

“Now, Miss Millie,” the male voice said.

I repeated who I was and said, “I need some help to stand. Can my people help me up, please?”

The male voice, Sheriff Wilkes I presumed, sounded a little uncertain, but said, “They can move.”

Jason grabbed the arm that was holding my ID up in the air. He looked down at me and pulled me to my feet. It was too quick and I didn't have to pretend that the world went spinning. When my knees buckled, I didn't fight it. I slid to my knees and Shang-Da took my other arm. Between the two of them, they got me standing and facing the cops.

Sheriff Wilkes was about five foot eight, and he was wearing a pale blue Smokey the Bear hat and a matching uniform. He looked trim and in shape like he worked out and took it seriously. The gun at his side was a ten mil Beretta. It was holstered. The day was looking up.

He stared at me with eyes a dark, solid, trustworthy brown. He took the hat off and wiped sweat from his forehead. His hair was a pale salt and pepper and made me put his age at over forty. “Anita Blake, I've heard of you. What are you doing in our town?”

I spat another mouthful of blood into the grass and managed to stand more than sag between Shang-Da and Jason. Truth was, I could have stood on my own. But all the bad guys were on the ground. Even the one that had kicked me was down for the count. Shang-Da must have stepped in after I went down. I knew Jason couldn't have taken the tall man.

“I came to see a friend in your jail—Richard Zeeman.”

“Friend?” he made it a question.

“Yeah, friend.”

There were two deputies behind Wilkes. They were both over
six feet tall. One of them had a scar that went from eyebrow to jaw on one side. Jagged; more a broken bottle than a knife. The other deputy had a shotgun in his hands. It wasn't pointed at us, but it was there. Scarface snickered at me. The one with the shotgun just stared with eyes as empty and pitiless as a doll's.

Maiden was standing behind the others, hands in front, one hand clasping his opposite wrist. His face was blank, but there was an edge around his mouth that said he was trying not to smile.

“We've got to run you all in for assault,” Wilkes said.

“Great,” I said, “I can't wait to press charges.”

He looked at me, his eyes just a touch wide. “You're the only ones standing, Ms. Blake. I don't think you have grounds to press charges.”

I leaned a little heavier against Jason. A trickle of blood ran from the corner of my mouth. I could feel my eye already starting to swell. I've always been a bleeder if you hit me in the face. I knew I looked pitiful. “They attacked us, and we were forced to defend ourselves.” I let my knees slide out from under me. Shang-Da caught me and lifted me easily in his arms. I closed my eyes and curled against his chest.

“Shit,” Wilkes said.

“Look at that poor little girl, Billy Wilkes,” Millie said. “You going to take her before Judge Henry. What do you think he's going to do to the rest of these hooligans? He's got a daughter about her age.”

“Shit,” Wilkes said again with more force. “Let's get everybody down to the hospital. We'll sort it out there.”

“Ambulance is on its way,” Maiden said.

“One won't be enough,” Wilkes said.

Maiden laughed low and deep. “There aren't enough ambulances in the county for this many bodies.”

“There would have been enough for three,” Wilkes said.

I tensed in Shang-Da's arms. He tightened around me, one hand pressed against the side of my head firmly enough that raising up would have hurt my face. I let the breath ease out of my body and concentrated on being still, but I'd remember what Wilkes had said. We'd see who got the ambulance ride next time.

8

I
T TOOK ONE
ambulance, one pickup truck, two squad cars, Santa's sleigh, and me riding in the van for everyone to get to the hospital. Okay, not Santa's sleigh, but we did look like a parade. Nearly six hours later, we were back in Myerton in the only interrogation room they had. I'd been the only one of the injured that got to leave the hospital.

The guy that Jason had thrown into the truck might have permanent spine damage. They'd know when the swelling went down. Two of the three that Shang-Da had knocked unconscious had regained consciousness. They had concussions but would recover. The third was still out for the count, and the doctors were talking about swelling of the brain and skull fractures. Shang-Da had also done the bad guy with the compound fracture. I only had Mel to my credit, but he was in worse shape than the compound fracture. It takes a hell of a lot of work to heal a joint break. Sometimes you never recover full use of the limb. I felt sort of bad about that, but he had pulled the knife.

Belisarius had been a busy little lawyer. He'd not only arranged bail for Richard, but he'd also been representing us for the last hour or so. Richard was a free man, temporarily. If Belisarius could keep the rest of us out of jail, he was worth the money.

Wilkes didn't want to arrest us, but he wanted to take our fingerprints. I didn't have a problem with that until Shang-Da did. He really didn't want his prints taken, which made both Wilkes and me suspicious. But if Shang-Da wouldn't do it, then none of us would. I told Wilkes if he wanted our prints, he had to charge us with something. He seemed reluctant to do that.

Maybe it was because I'd used my one phone call to contact a cop I knew, who in turn had contacted an FBI agent I knew.
Having a call from the feds made Wilkes jumpy as hell. The bad guys had ambushed us across from the police station. You didn't do a planned attack right next door to the cops unless you were pretty sure they wouldn't spoil the fun. The bad guys had known the police wouldn't help us. They'd said as much during the fight, challenging Millie to call Wilkes, like it wouldn't help. But Wilkes's reaction to the call from the feds sort of clinched it for me. Policemen are very territorial. No federal laws had been broken. The FBI had no business in a simple assault case. Wilkes should have been pissed, and he wasn't. Oh, he made noises like he was angry, and he was, but he should have raised hell, and he didn't. His reaction to everything was just a little bit off—a little bit less convincing than it should have been.

I was betting he was dirty. I just couldn't prove it yet. Of course, it wasn't my job to prove it. I'd come down here to get Richard out of jail, and we'd done that.

Wilkes finally asked to speak with me alone. Belisarius didn't like it, but he left with the others. I sat at the little table and looked at Wilkes.

It was the cleanest interrogation room I'd ever been in. The table was pale pine and looked handmade. The walls were white and clean. Even the linoleum on the floor was hospital bright. I didn't think Myerton got a lot of use for the room. It'd probably started life as a storage closet. It had been almost too small to hold five of us, but there was room for two.

Wilkes pulled a chair out and sat across from me. He clasped his hands in front of him and looked at me. There was a band around his head where the hair had been pressed flat from the hat. There was a plain gold wedding band on his left hand and one of those watches that joggers use, big and black and utilitarian. Since I had the lady's version of the same watch on my left wrist, it was hard to criticize.

“What?” I said. “You going to give me the silent treatment until I scream for mercy?”

He gave a very small smile. “Made some phone calls about you, Blake. There's a lot of talk that you'll bend the law if you need to. That maybe you've murdered people.”

I just looked at him. I could feel my face thinning out, blanking. Once upon a time, every emotion I'd felt had played along
my face, but that was a while ago. I'd perfected my blank cop stare, and it showed nothing.

“Is there a point to this conversation?” I asked.

The smile this time was bigger. “I just like to know who I'm dealing with, Blake, that's all.”

“Good to be thorough,” I said.

He nodded. “I got calls from a Saint Louis cop, a fed, and a state cop. The state cop says you're a pain in the ass and will bend the law six ways to Sunday.”

“Bet that was Freemount,” I said. “She's still pissed about a case we worked together.”

He nodded, smiling pleasantly. “The fed sort of hinted that if you were detained, he might find a reason to have the local federal office to come take a look around.”

I smiled. “Bet you really enjoyed that.”

His brown eyes went hard and dark. “I don't want the feebies down here messing in my pond.”

“I'll bet you don't, Wilkes.”

His face tightened, letting me see just how angry he was. “What the fuck do you care?”

I leaned across the table on my elbows. “You should be more careful who you do a frame-up job on, Wilkes.”

“He's a fucking junior high science teacher. How was I supposed to know he was shacking up with the fucking Executioner?”

“We're not shacking up,” I said automatically. I sat back in my seat. “What do you want, Wilkes? Why the private talk?”

He ran his hand through his salt-and-pepper hair, and for the first time, I realized how nervous he was. He was scared. Why? What the hell was happening in this tiny town?

“If the rape charges disappear, Zeeman is free to leave town. You and everybody go with him. No harm, no foul.”

A sport's metaphor—ooh, I was all a-tingle. “I didn't come down here to sniff around your mess, Wilkes. I'm not a cop. I came down here to get Richard out of trouble.”

“He's out of trouble if he leaves.”

“I'm not his keeper, Wilkes. I can't promise what Richard will do.”

“Why does a schoolteacher have bodyguards?” Wilkes asked.

I shrugged. “Why do you want the schoolteacher out of the way bad enough to frame him for rape?”

“We've all got our secrets, Blake. You make sure he leaves town and takes his assassins with him, and we can all keep our secrets.”

I looked at my hands spread on the smooth tabletop. I looked back up, met his eyes. “I'll talk to Richard, see what I can do. But I can't promise anything until after I've talked to him.”

“Make him listen, Blake. Zeeman is so clean he squeaks, but you and I know the score.”

I shook my head. “Yeah, I know the score, and I know what people say about me.” I stood up.

He stood up. We looked at each other.

“I don't always pay attention to the letter of the law, that's true. One of the reasons Richard and I aren't dating anymore is that he is so fucking squeaking clean it makes my teeth hurt. But we have one thing in common.”

“What's that?” Wilkes asked.

“Push us, and we push back. Richard usually for moral grounds, because it's the right thing to do. Me, because I am just that unpleasant.”

“Unpleasant,” Wilkes said. “Mel Cooper may never walk right again or have the full use of his left arm.”

“He shouldn't have pulled a knife on me,” I said.

“If there hadn't been witnesses, would you have killed him?”

I smiled, and even to me, it felt like a strange smile, not humorous, unpleasant maybe. “I'll talk to Richard. Hopefully, we'll be out of your hair before tomorrow night.”

“I wasn't always a small-town cop, Blake. Don't let the surroundings fool you. I will not let you and your people fuck with me.”

“Funny,” I said. “I was thinking the very same thing.”

“Well,” Wilkes said, “we know where we stand.”

“I guess we do,” I said.

“I hope come dark tomorrow you and your friends are on your way out of town.”

I stared into his brown eyes. I'd looked into scarier eyes, blanker, more dead. He didn't have the eyes of a professional killer. He didn't even have good cop eyes. I could see the fear shiny and almost panicked around the edges. No, I'd seen scarier eyes. But that didn't mean he wouldn't kill me if he got the
chance. Make even a good man scared enough, and you never know what he'll do. Make a bad man scared, and you are in trouble. Wilkes probably hadn't killed anybody yet or they wouldn't have framed Richard for rape. They'd have framed him for murder or just killed him. So Wilkes hadn't slid completely down into the abyss. But once you embrace the screaming darkness, eventually, you kill. Maybe Wilkes didn't know that yet, but if we pushed hard enough, he'd figure it out.

BOOK: Blue Moon
7.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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