Dead Ice
Page 96

 Laurell K. Hamilton

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Susannah was standing gazing down at the gigantic tiger with a look of awe on her face. She started to drop to her knees and reach out, but Nicky interfered. “Not a good idea; when he wakes up he may not know where he is for a few seconds. You don’t want to startle him.”
She looked at Nicky, blinking, uncomprehending.
I said, “Think of him as a combat vet; they don’t startle awake well.”
She nodded, looking serious, because I knew that one of her ex-boyfriends had let his post-traumatic stress disorder ruin their relationship and his life. I’d heard too much about that failed relationship, too, come to think of it. There was a reason that Susannah and I had never gotten together for drinks and girl talk; I didn’t want to know more about her love life than I already did.
“That is a damn big cat,” Zerbrowski said.
I nodded. Nicky offered me a hand up and I took it, though I was shaking gunk off my hands and scraping it off my clothes again. Jesus, I was going to need another shower. Nicky was almost untouched except for the knee of one pant leg where he’d knelt to check Domino’s pulse.
“How come you’re clean and I’m covered in it?”
“I was almost two feet farther away,” he said.
“Far enough, I guess,” I said as I flung the goopy stuff from my hand onto the grass.
Zerbrowski was grinning at me.
“Oh, just say it, before you bust trying to keep it in,” I said.
“This has got to be a fetish, it’s like clear bukkake.”
I gave him a dirty look. “It’s thicker, lasts longer, and doesn’t break down as quickly.” I scraped more of it off my arms and onto the grass.
“Wow,” he said, still grinning so hard it looked like he’d hurt himself.
“Do you need help getting him into your SUV?” Manny asked, gazing down at the tiger.
The air flexed, almost like heat over a summer highway, and then the enormous tiger seemed to shrink in upon itself, and Domino’s human body appeared like an insect melting out of an ice cube, until the only thing left was him.
“Wow,” Susannah said, and she wasn’t remarking on the stuff I was scraping off my face. She was looking down at the still-unconscious Domino almost the same way she’d looked at his beast, like it was one of the most beautiful things she’d ever seen, except this time there was good old-fashioned lust mixed in with the nature-admiring awe.
It was a bad sign that he’d shifted back so quickly and been unconscious through both changes; it meant he was very hurt. Nicky and I exchanged a look between us. We were the only ones standing there who knew it was a bad sign. But two of the people with us knew my face well enough to know it was bad.

“He going to be all right?” Zerbrowski asked.
Manny just studied my face and Nicky’s.
I nodded. “Eventually.”
“He’s easier to carry like this,” Nicky said, as he knelt down and picked up the unconscious man. Domino’s long legs trailed over his arms, but the rest of him was tucked in close to Nicky’s chest, the way you’d carry a child.
“You really are as strong as you look,” Susannah said.
“Stronger,” he said, and turned to me. “We ready to go?”
I nodded. “Yeah, I’m past ready to get out of this cemetery.”
Manny helped me pack my bag up and carried it for me so I wouldn’t get gunk all over the nice leather. I carried two of the long guns, and Zerbrowski carried the second shotgun. Eddie told me that he had a call in to the company that ran this and several other cemeteries in the area.
“Hopefully we’ll get a contract for the ghouls, before nightfall,” he said.
I nodded. “Yeah, we can hope.”
Susannah kept looking at Domino, still very nude in Nicky’s arms. She’d catch herself staring and then look away, but her gaze kept going back to him. It was a nice sight, but it was still a little rude. I started to tell her to keep her eyes in her head, but then I remembered Domino asking if I’d be all right if he dated Susannah, so I kept my mouth shut. If they dated, she’d be doing more than just looking at him nude. It wasn’t my business, really, honestly, it wasn’t, so why did her staring at him like it was a peep show bother me so much? That was the question, wasn’t it? Damn.
 
 
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THE THREE OF us that were conscious put on sunglasses against all the morning sunlight. I called Special Agent Manning from the car; let’s hear it for Bluetooth actually working. “You want to watch the videos using your ability with the dead, is that what you said?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“Didn’t you use your expertise with the dead the first time?”
“My expertise, but not my ability.”
“Explain the difference to me.”
“I looked at the videos like a cop who can raise the dead. Now, I want to watch them with my psychic ability actually active, to see if I can pick up any clues I couldn’t see with just my eyes; does that make sense?”
“Actually, yes.”
“I’d like to include a second animator for this second viewing, Manny Rodriguez.”
“He’s the animator who trained you originally; we’re familiar with him.” She said it like the words meant more, like she’d checked into him in a more than typical way. I let it go with him sitting in the car with me, since I hadn’t mentioned that I was making the call on the Bluetooth so that everyone in the car could hear it. I would ask later, though.
“Can he be my second set of eyes on the viewing?”
“No, Marshal Blake, he can’t be.”
“If I asked why not, would you answer me?”
“You know that he was an intimate of Dominga Salvador, whom you’ve described as one of the most evil people you’ve ever met.”
It was hard not to look at Manny, but I managed. “I’m aware of Manny’s past.”
“Then you can understand why we don’t want him involved on this case.”
“Once a bad guy, always a bad guy, huh?”
“In my experience, Marshal Blake, yes.”
I patted Manny’s shoulder as I drove, just to let him know I didn’t agree. “We don’t have time to argue about it, Agent Manning, so I’ll just go it alone, psychically speaking, through the videos again.”
“You can have another psychic with you, Blake, just not Rodriguez.”
“There’s no one else at Animators Inc. that I’d want to share the duties with,” I said.
“How about Kirkland?”
“Like I said, no one at Animators Inc.”
“He’s full time with us and the Marshals Service now, so he doesn’t work there anymore,” she said; the tone in her voice was trying to get me to share information, though I couldn’t have explained how: I think she’d just been on the job so long that everything was a potential interrogation. I wondered if she’d ever had teenage kids; they must have loved it, in that I-hate-you kind of way.
“Larry and I have a fundamental difference of methodology,” I said.
“What does that mean?”
“He thinks I’m a cold-blooded, murdering sociopath, and I think he’s a weak-willed rule lover who flinches at the hard shit.”