Crimson Death
Page 136

 Laurell K. Hamilton

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   Griffin had thrown one of the body bags over his shoulder, and Donnie had the other one. I didn’t know which teenage vampire was which, but it didn’t really matter. They were both going to the same place: a cell here at the “warehouse” that was apparently the headquarters for Nolan’s new group. The fact that we hadn’t seen any of the drive here meant that we didn’t know where the hell we were, or how to get here, or how to leave. I mean, we knew to go out one of the doors, but beyond that we didn’t know which way Dublin was, or the airport we’d landed at, or anything really. I’d seen so little of the country that it was like any other business trip out of town. Throw in the hotel later, and add a cemetery, and me being able to actually hunt vampires, and it would be like Old Home Week. Nathaniel was still hoping to have a few days at the end of everything to actually play tourist; me, too.
   Nolan had left the last body bag behind when he took Edward off for their secret squirrel talk. The body bag lay on the concrete floor where Nolan had left it after he and Brennan dragged it out. They had treated it like you treat the dead, like they had no feelings to worry about and no flesh to bruise. Come nightfall the vampire in the bag might have both. It depended on how long she’d been undead and how much control she had. Whoever had made their daughter a vampire should have been able to call all of them out into the night to do his or her bidding, but it was like the “master vampire” was just making vampires sort of willy-nilly. If there was a plan, then neither the police nor Nolan and his people could figure out the logic of it. Maybe there was no plan; maybe it was just a vampire that was doing whatever the hell they wanted to do in Dublin.
   “Nolan said to secure the prisoners,” Griffin said.
   Brennan grabbed one end of the body bag. Jake grabbed the other end and helped him lift. “Allow me to help you.”
   “I can carry it.”
   “Of that, I have no doubt, but it is the heaviest bag and we are here to help you.”
   “Are we putting vampires in the cells without testing them first?” Donnie said.
   “We’re following orders,” Brennan said.
   “Are you saying that Nolan pushed to have you guys take the vampires as prisoners, or whatever, but you’ve never actually had a supernatural anything in a cell to see if it will hold them?” I asked.
   Brennan scowled at me. He really wasn’t handsome enough for the sour disposition, but then I didn’t think anyone was worth it anymore. “We know our job, Blake.”

   Fortune flashed him her best smile, which was a pretty good smile. “But isn’t part of why we’re here to help you test things out?”
   His face had started to soften as he looked into her blue eyes, but he fought it off and scowled even harder. I wondered if he’d learned the technique from Nolan.
   “They were supposed to help us test the cells before we used them for actual prisoners,” Donnie said. If she was having any trouble holding the body in its bag, it didn’t show. I realized she was built a lot like Magda and Fortune, tall and athletic-looking. Even with more women on the “team,” I was still the short, delicate-looking one. Even Echo was inches taller than me, so having all our vampires up and running wouldn’t change that I was sort of the runt of the group. I didn’t normally worry about it that much, but I suddenly realized that this was the most women I’d ever worked with at one time and I was still the short one.
   “Then maybe we should do that before nightfall,” Nicky said.
   “They feel like dead bodies now,” I said, “but once the sun goes down they won’t be.”
   “What am I supposed to do? Say Oh my and drop the bag because it’s supposed to be full of scary vampire?” Donnie asked.
   “No, I’m just saying that it’d be good to know your cells will hold before the ‘prisoners’”—and I made little air quotes around the word—“wake up and start looking for food.”
   Griffin and Donnie exchanged a look. Brennan scowled harder. Mort joined him in the scowling, though he wasn’t as good at it yet. I wasn’t sure if he was just more pleasant than he was pretending to be, or if he hadn’t been around Nolan as long. Flannery stepped up, smiling.
   “I think it’s a good idea to test the cells before we lose the sun,” he said, still smiling.
   “Great. Then let’s do it,” I said.
   “Which of your people gets locked into the cell to try to break out?” Brennan asked; he’d taken the bag from Jake and hefted it over his shoulder.
   “Let me do it,” Nicky said.
   They all looked at him. “No,” said Brennan.
   “We want a fair test for the vampires that will be in the cells tonight. I don’t think you, Mr. Murdock, are going to be an equivalent for a mother and two teenage girls,” Flannery said.
   Nicky gave them a grin that was more a snarl. “You’re just afraid it won’t hold me.”
   “I will do it,” Magda said, “if someone will watch over my master.”
   “I will be honored to bear his burden, and treat him as if he were my own master,” Jake said. It sounded more formal than they usually talked to each other, and maybe it was a type of prepared speech, but regardless Magda lifted the duffel bag holding Giacomo and started to hand it to Jake.
   “You really call the vampire in that bag master?” Donnie asked.
   Magda looked at her. “Yes.”
   “I don’t,” Nathaniel said.
   “Is it like a bondage thing?” Mort asked.
   “No,” Magda said.
   “Why don’t you call yours master? Is it a guy-girl thing? Please tell me it’s not some kind of male-versus-female thing,” Donnie said.
   Nathaniel smiled at her. “No, of course not. Damian just isn’t my master.”
   “Then why are you carrying him?” she asked.
   “Because I needed my hands free for weapons,” I said.
   “Is he your master?”
   “No.”
   Griffin said, “What do Ms. Fortunada and Ms. Sanderson mean when they call their vampires master? If it’s not a bondage thing, is it like a real slave thing?”
   “It’s more the old idea of fidelity to the Lord of the Manor,” I said.
   “Some vampires demand to be called master by all of their underlings,” Fortune said.
   “Do your masters demand that?” Donnie asked.
   “No,” most of us said together. Then we all looked at one another, and Nolan’s people looked at us, too.
   Donnie said, “That was a little disturbing that all of you said that.”