Chapter 16
As cold hands settled on our shoulders, Sara made a high-pitched sound, and I jumped
about a foot in the air. Thrane had moved behind us, and I could hear the edge of
amusement—and hunger—in his voice. “Now, now, children. What do I always say?”
“Never without a contract, and never without consent,” the others droned. They sounded
like kids in a classroom reciting some inane tidbit of trivia off of a chalkboard
for their teacher.
“Very good! Next week, we’re going to rehash the ‘Your Donor is a Human, Not a Cow’
and the ‘Technically You’re Still Human, so Have Some Humanity’ talks.”
That pronouncement was met with a chorus of groans.
Thrane’s fingers tightened, and I tilted my head to look up at him, the tendons creaking
in my neck with the movement.
“Now, I am sure you investigators have a great deal of investigating to do, yes?”
Thrane didn’t wait for our reply. He started pushing us back in the direction of the
door. “All right, then. You just go on about your business, and we’ll pretend you
never came here. Out of the way, Brendan.”
Though Sara and I both stumbled some on the way, we soon got our bearings and moved
under our own power again. Brendan, the vampire who had announced Cheese’s death to
the rest of the group, hopped off the steps and wandered over to where Elly and the
others were doing their magazine survey.
“Please,” I said over my shoulder, hoping this wasn’t yet another dead end, “this
might concern you, too. We’re trying to find a necromancer.”
Thrane came up short, nearly causing us to stumble again since he never let us go.
He growled, the low rumbling echoing strangely in the room. Sara was pushed toward
the stairs, while he spun me around to face him.
I finally got a good look at the tattoo under his eye. It was some kind of stylized
Egyptian symbol. It added an extra level of creepy to his grin, which was already
forced and predatory.
“Necromancer, you say?”
“Y-yes,” I stammered, really wishing he’d take his hands off me.
“As in, the guy who has been toting zombies around town? That necromancer?”
Sara and I exchanged a look. Maybe this wouldn’t be such a waste after all.
His fangs extended as I watched, my eyes widening. “What do you think, people? Sounds
like Very Bad Things are going down in Froofty McPrissy-pants’s territory.”
The girl he’d addressed as Shannon shook her head. “Better not, Jimmy. Just let the
necromancer take him out.”
Thrane thrust a finger in the air dramatically. “We shall move in and strike while
he is weak!”
Shannon smirked. “Uh-huh.”
“Muster our forces. We book a cab and arrive at midnight!”
“Or, you know, we could go do karaoke.”
One of Thrane’s brows shot up. He was clearly intrigued. “Oh, better idea. Muster
our forces. We go next door!”
Shannon’s eye roll made it clear that his antics were nothing unusual to this crowd.
Or to her, anyway. “Aye aye, chief.”
Man, Trinity wasn’t kidding when she said this guy was crazier than a shithouse rat.
Thrane patted me on the shoulder, and I cringed. “You know, as much as I would like
to help you ladies, I’m afraid I would enjoy seeing the usurper’s kingdom torn out
from under him one piece at a time far more. You’re welcome to come join us for karaoke
night once the mage is done dealing with that pretender.”
“Please,” Sara said, “we’re asking for your help. If we don’t find that necromancer,
something bad might happen to us.”
“My dear, I am terribly sorry to hear that,” he replied, tipping up the brim of his
hat with his thumb as he bent to go eye-to-eye with her. “If only there were something
I could do. But alas, your bad taste in clients is not my problem. Now, if you’ll
excuse us, karaoke music calls.”
Fucking hell. He was hiding what he knew. Yet another grandstander—just what I needed.
Something stirred in me, deep down, making the hair on my arms rise and my fingers
arch into claws. It felt like my vision was changing, growing sharper and picking
up more details. Whatever was going on, it made Thrane uneasy enough to pull back
from me a couple of steps, his predatory grin easing into a frown.
“Look,” I said, my tongue feeling strangely thick in my mouth, “I have had it up to
fucking here with you goddamned showboating, vain, ostentatious assholes! You know something about this guy, and you’re deliberately keeping it from us. Do
you want us to die? Because if we do, it’ll be on your head!”
“Damn, lady,” one of the other vampires said, “no need to Hulk out. Calm the hell
down.”
My glare shut him up pretty quick. He backed off, turning his gaze away. I didn’t
know what was wrong with me, but my temper hadn’t gripped me so hard since the last
time I was wearing the belt. Heat and rage simmered in my veins—and I liked it.
When I looked back at Thrane, a snarl curling my lip, he raised his hands and also
took a step back from me. “Ma’am, I’m sorry if I offended. Truly.”
“About time somebody was sorry,” I snapped.
“Shia, don’t,” Sara said. “Let’s just get out of here.”
As much as I would have liked to have left these weirdos behind, I stood my ground.
There was no way I was walking out of here with nothing to show for it. Though there
was a little voice in the back of my head that seemed to believe I might be overreacting,
I wasn’t ready to let this go. Not yet.
“Well?” I demanded of Thrane.
He shook his head, taking another careful—very careful—step back from me. “We don’t
have much information. Sometimes he comes to our neighborhood. I’ve seen him here
once or twice before, but we don’t bother each other. He hasn’t made a move against
my people, and I would prefer not to garner his attention. Fair enough for you?”
Some part of me felt tempted to swipe at him with my nails. Thought that I could take
him in a fight.
There was just enough common sense left in me to remember why that was a bad idea.
Visions of how quickly Max and Royce moved, how viciously they fought, swirled in
my head as I closed my eyes and clenched my hands into tight fists at my side. After
a few deep breaths, I relaxed enough to reopen my eyes and give him a response.
“Fair enough. Thank you.”
Thrane nodded, the other vampires edging over to his side or behind him. Most of them
looked nervous. Maybe even a little afraid. Of me? That was an interesting change
of pace.
“Not to put too fine a point on it, but it’s become a bit crowded in here. Shall we
. . . ?”
When he gestured, I took the hint. It was long past time for us to get the hell out
of there. Aside from the danger the vampires presented, there was something wrong
with me, too. I needed to get out, clear my head, and get ahold of myself.
Sara led the way, bounding up the stairs two at a time. I couldn’t really blame her
for wanting to rush out. Yet she stopped at the door, blocking the exit.
I started to ask her what was wrong, but the words trailed off as a foul stench wafted
into the room. All the anger faded away like smoke on the wind as that combination
of death and rot invaded my nostrils like a physical assault.
The vampires behind me started complaining—some of them blaming Brendan for the stink—but
then Sara was stumbling back into me, and I didn’t have time to worry about where
it was coming from.
Bloated, discolored fingers with long, jagged nails were grabbing at Sara’s shoulder
and arm, dragging her out through the door. By the time I got over my shock enough
to reach for her, she was gone.
“Sara!”
She screamed, and I heard wet thumps—she must have been fighting back. Thrane was
trying to haul me back while I was tugging at his grip on my collar to get free and
chase after her.
“Get out of the way! We need to shut the door!”
“Let go!”
He did. I charged up the stairs and out, though I skidded to a stop at the sight before
me, barely registering the sound of the door slamming shut and locking behind me.
Zombies had converged on the alley, dead bodies in various states of decomposition
shuffling about aimlessly, save for a few that were still crouched over a red puddle
and pile of body parts stained with thick, blackish blood. Trinity. I recognized her
kitten heels on the dismembered leg being munched on by one of the monsters.
Sara was struggling and gagging in the arms of a dead man who towered over her, his
lips bluish-green and peeled back from yellowing teeth, sunken, milky eyes staring
at nothing in particular. He didn’t react to the thumps against his forearms and shins
as she beat at him, and it was no wonder why. I doubted there were any nerve endings
left to feel anything in that walking corpse.
Some of the zombies turned in my direction, all gaping mouths and hollow or desiccated
eyes. My back thudded against the door.
A few started shuffling toward me, their feet dragging and arms slowly rising as they
approached.
“Stop, stop, stop! Those are humans, you bleeding idiots.”
The zombies stopped exactly where they were, frozen in place. A few feet away, one
tipped over on its side, losing its balance since it still had one foot in the air.
It kept the pose even when it fell with a wet smack onto the pavement.
Another was close enough to me that its shriveled, mummified fingers were only inches
from my throat. I couldn’t stop staring into the empty, gaping holes of its eye sockets,
every breath coming short and sharp, too rapid for me to manage a scream.
“Morons. All of you. Back up, you lot. Bring the other one over here.”
The ones closest to me shuffled back, some of them voicing what sounded like annoyed
moans.
A man soon stood before me, his hands on his hips and his brilliant green eyes narrowed
with irritation. He towered over me, nearly Chaz’s height, though he was skinny as
a rail. I thought that might be an Armani suit draped on his lanky frame. Whatever
it was, it wasn’t off the rack.
He gestured angrily at the zombies, shooing away the ones blocking the path of the
zombie still clinging to Sara, so it could set her down next to me. She smelled awful, and I didn’t even want to know what that was it had left behind in her hair. The
stink grew worse as she clung to me, one leg hooking around mine as she grabbed at
me and simultaneously tried to crawl under my skin and shove me in front of her.
I couldn’t blame her. I was pretty freaked out, too, though I was currently a bit
too scared to do more than stand there staring stupidly at the necromancer.
Once the zombies shuffle-walked their way into a rough semicircle around us, some
of them dripping some black liquid from hands and mouths, the guy regarded us with
a frown. He slid a long-fingered hand through his dark brown hair, settling some of
the gelled spikes against his skull. “Well, this is a new development. I don’t suppose
you two were here with that fruit fly pretender, were you?”
Neither Sara nor I could figure out what he was talking about. We were a little too
worried about having our entrails ripped out through our throats to consider it.
“For the love of Crowley, will you two stop looking at me like that? They’re not going
to hurt you.”
Sara made a high-pitched keening sound. I think I might have gibbered something, but
I’m not sure what.
“Right. Excellent. You know, just do me a favor. When you get back to that do-me queen,
Clyde, you tell that asshole that I’m coming for him next. Got it?”
We both nodded, fingers digging into each other’s skin and hair. That might have been
blood or something else trickling over my fingers by her cheek. Didn’t know, didn’t
care.
He sighed, and moved closer, lifting his hand. “Yeah. Of course you got it.” I had
time to notice that his palm was tattooed with an intricate design of a star in a
circle with a few other smaller symbols inside, very similar to the design I had seen
burned into the floorboards at Arnold’s apartment, before he pressed his hand against
Sara’s temple. “Sleep.”
Her body was a sudden deadweight against mine, dragging me down to the ground as my
weak knees gave out. He knelt down, his bright, nearly glowing eyes boring into mine,
sucking me into a cold, lonely place.
“That goes for you, too. Sleep.”
My vision grayed at the edges and faded to a pinpoint. It felt like all of my strength
flooded out of my body as I slumped over, my cheek resting on the dirty alley floor.
It might have been my imagination, but I thought he might have touched Sara’s arm,
brushing his fingers over her sleeve.
Before long, the necromancer rose and dusted off his pants legs, striding purposely
toward the mouth of the alley. He snapped his fingers, and the zombies trailed after
him in a slow shamble, leaving us alone with what remained of Trinity in a black-and-red-stained
pile a few yards away.
Then everything went black.