Embraced by Darkness(17)
“That’s just stupid.”
“Humans have always wanted what they can’t have. It’s the whole forbidden-fruit effect.”
That was an effect not restricted to humans, but in this case, the laws were there for a very good reason—the protection of humans.
“This club would have to have a hell of an insurance bill.” I looked at the matchbook, flipping it over and still seeing nothing of interest. “Did you ferret out the article she wrote?”“I’ve requested a copy be sent to us.” He paused. “Adrienne is very well liked by her coworkers, you know. That’s surprising, considering her family.”
“I guess there has to be one good apple in every bad barrel.” I took a sip of coffee, then asked, “No whispers of her sexuality, then?”
He raised a pale eyebrow “No. Why?”
“Because she’s sharing her apartment with a woman Blake had no idea existed, and I found that woman overdosed in Adrienne’s bed yesterday afternoon.”
“That doesn’t mean there’s a relationship. They could be good friends.”
“And how many people are willing to off themselves over the disappearance of a good friend?”
“Not many, but then, it wouldn’t be the first time someone emotionally unstable has done such a thing.”
True. “Nothing else of interest?”
He shook his head. “I haven’t had the chance to do anything more. I’ve been chasing after this damn baby vamp sucking the life out of folk in the Footscray district.”
“When will these idiots realize we make the creator pay for the crimes of his young?” The Directorate wasted too much of its time ridding the world of rogue baby vamps when there were often greater evils to worry about.
He snorted. “For some of them, probably never.”
“What, their brains go out the door when they become a vampire?”
“Think of it this way. Expecting some vamps to control their urge to create underlings is like handing out free condoms and expecting horny teenagers to actually use them. The excitement of the moment always gets in the way.”
Amusement ran through me. “That’s the first time I’ve heard of vampires being compared to horny teenagers.”
He shrugged. “It works, though. Most of these babies are created by vamps who are still young themselves and who love the feel of power it gives them.”
“So have you caught any trace of his daytime hidey-hole yet?”
“Narrowed it down to a couple of buildings. I’m off hunting once Jack gets here for his daily pep talk.”
I grinned. Pep talks weren’t exactly Jack’s forte, which is exactly why we referred to his morning rundowns that way. And it had the extra bonus of pissing him off—something I liked to do every now and again, just for the hell of it.
I tossed the matchbook in the air and caught it lightly. “I’ll check this out once I talk to the girlfriend at the hospital.”
“What girl in what hospital?” Jack said, as he strode into the room.
“It’s a missing-persons case that may blow up to be a whole lot more.”
He walked over to the coffee machine, filled up a cup, then said, “Tell me about it.”
I did. He harrumphed. “I don’t want it monopolizing your time, but keep me updated on progress all the same.”
I nodded. At least I had the go-ahead to pull in Directorate resources if I needed to. “Has Cole handed in his report from the Richmond murder case?”
“It’s in the system. Both parties involved tested as human.”
“What? Impossible.”
“Not according to the lab results.”
“But he tore that poor woman apart. A human just isn’t capable of that sort of strength.”
“You mentioned possible vamp involvement in your report.”
“Yeah, but if a vamp had been there, we would have smelled him.”
He gave me the “look.” “Not necessarily. Some of us do wash, you know.”
I smiled. “Those of you who do are few and far between.” Smelling like the grave seemed to be the “in” thing amongst Jack’s lot. Though, admittedly, I did know some very nice-smelling vamps. Jack was one. Quinn was another. Even the cow smelled pleasant, though I was never likely to tell her that. “Besides, if there was someone else involved, wouldn’t there have been some indication? Surely Cole and his team would have found something—some hint or clue to suggest this?”
“Not if our vamp was an extremely strong psychic.”
“Can even the most powerful psychic push a human to superhuman extremes? I’ve never heard of a talent that could endow someone with that sort of strength.”
“There’s a lot of talents out there that we know a whole lot of nothing about,” Rhoan commented. “And there are lots of labs playing around with all sorts of enhancing drugs.”
“A comforting thought for those of us on the front line,” I muttered.
“Give it a few more years and you won’t even blink at the sort of crap you see or find.”
“Actually, that’s a place I’m fighting to stay away from.”
Rhoan’s gaze met mine, gray eyes serious. “You won’t have any other choice but to find that place in yourself. It’s either that, or go mad.”
“Then going mad is the better option.”
I didn’t want to have the skill to switch my emotions off. Didn’t want to ever lose the anger and horror of walking into a crime scene and seeing another useless death. For good or for bad, I was now a guardian, but I’d be damned if I became just another cold-blooded killer.
Which my brother, for all that I loved him, could be. I’d seen it happen. Seen the switch flicked.
It was damn scary stuff.
“Business, people, business,” Jack said. “Riley, I want you to go check the boyfriend’s current residence. See if there’s anything there that hints at supernatural or nonhuman involvement. Then check the girl’s apartment and go talk to her parents.”
I nodded. “What makes you think the boyfriend may have known this vamp, if indeed there was a vamp?”
“I doubt it was mere coincidence that this vamp and those two young people happened to arrive at that house the same night. Something is going on, and we need to uncover what.”
Before it happened again.
And it would happen again.
I shivered and rubbed my arms, wishing my goddamn clairvoyance would be a little more helpful. Like, give me a name, or a location, or something useful like that. Weird little premonitions of impending doom weren’t going to help anything, least of all my nerves.
“Rhoan, how are you doing with the Footscray killings?”
I jumped off the desk as Rhoan made his report, then dumped my purse on the next desk and sat down, logging into the computer and holding still for the eye scan. Once I’d typed in my password, I entered the system and pulled up Cole’s files. I studied his report but avoided the pictures. I’d seen more than enough bloodshed and human bits up close and personal.There was nothing that leapt out and waved clue. Nothing that explained the sudden act of violence by a man apparently ready and willing to settle down with the woman he’d so brutally murdered.
Why would he do such a thing? There was no history of violence in Liam Barry’s background, no brushes with the law. He’d been a model student through school and university, and had been considered by the law firm he worked for future partner material.
So what had turned him? And how had he managed to tear Callie Harris—the woman he supposedly loved—limb from limb?
I didn’t know, but I had every intention of finding out.
I checked both his and his parents’ address, then glanced up at Jack, waiting until he and Rhoan had finished discussing the baby vamp case before saying, “I need a car.”
“See Salliane.”
“Unlike some in this room, that’s something I try to do as little as possible.”
He gave me his vampire face. The one that said he was annoyed but trying not to show it. “Will you two just quit the crap and get along?”
“Not possible, boss. She’s a cow, and I’m a bitch. Two species that will never see eye to eye.”
“Just get down there and get that car before I find something nasty for you to do.”
I was tempted to ask what could be worse than the murder scene he’d sent me to yesterday, but, knowing Jack, he probably could find something worse. So I shut my mouth, collected my purse, and got out of there.
The cow turned around as I entered the liaisons office, and rolled her brown eyes. She always reminded me of a caramel-haired Amazon—she had the height and the strength and the added bonus of big breasts. I pretty much figured she was wet-dream material for most men, which made Jack’s reluctance on the involvement front all the more puzzling. I mean, he was a man with needs, and Sal sure as hell was willing to fulfill each and every one of them. Or was it simply the fact that she was also a vamp? Quinn had told me two vamps couldn’t actually live together because of the whole territorial thing. And yet we had vamps living downstairs side by side without any real problems, so maybe Quinn had been flinging yet another lie. It wouldn’t have been the first time.
“Well, well,” she said, voice all sultry. “The mutt in person. Isn’t this a pleasure.”
I gave her my most pleasant smile. Her eyes narrowed and she stiffened in the seat, as if readying for an attack. Amusement bubbled through me. There might be parts of this job I hated, but God, little moments like this just made it all seem worthwhile.