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A man sat near the far wall. He smiled when we came in. He was a large man with a pleasant round face, double-chi

“Mr. Vaughn and Ms. Blake, how nice of you to drive out.” His voice went with his face, pleasant, damn near amiable.

A slender black man sat in one of the leather chairs. He was over six feet tall, exactly how much over was hard to tell. He was slumped down, long legs stretched out in front of him with the ankles crossed. His legs were taller than I was. His brown eyes watched me as if he were trying to memorize me and would be graded later.

The blond bodyguard went to lean against the bookcases. He couldn’t quite cross his arms, jacket too tight, muscles too big. You really shouldn’t lean against a wall and try to look tough unless you can cross your arms. Ruins the effect.

Mr. Gaynor said, “You’ve met Tommy.” He motioned towards the sitting bodyguard. “That’s Bruno.”

“Is that your real name or just a nickname?” I asked, looking straight into Bruno’s eyes.

He shifted just a little in his chair. “Real name.”

I smiled.

“Why?” he asked.

“I’ve just never met a bodyguard who was really named Bruno.”

“Is that supposed to be fu

I shook my head. Bruno. He never had a chance. It was like naming a girl Venus. All Brunos had to be bodyguards. It was a rule. Maybe a cop? Naw, it was a bad guy’s name. I smiled.

Bruno sat up in his chair, one smooth, muscular motion. He wasn’t wearing a gun that I could see, but there was a presence to him. Dangerous, it said, watch out.

Guess I shouldn’t have smiled.

Bert interrupted, “Anita, please. I do apologize, Mr. Gaynor...Mr. Bruno. Ms. Blake has a rather peculiar sense of humor.”

“Don’t apologize for me, Bert. I don’t like it.” I don’t know what he was so sore about anyway. I hadn’t said the really insulting stuff out loud.

“Now, now,” Mr. Gaynor said. “No hard feelings. Right, Bruno?”

Bruno shook his head and frowned at me, not angry, sort of perplexed.

Bert flashed me an angry look, then turned smiling to the man in the wheelchair. “Now, Mr. Gaynor, I know you must be a busy man. So, exactly how old is the zombie you want raised?”

“A man who gets right down to business. I like that.” Gaynor hesitated, staring at the door. A woman entered.

She was tall, leggy, blond, with cornflower-blue eyes. The dress, if it was a dress, was rose-colored and silky. It clung to her body the way it was supposed to, hiding what decency demanded, but leaving very little to the imagination. Long pale legs were stuffed into pink spike heels, no hose. She stalked across the carpet, and every man in the room watched her. And she knew it.

She threw back her head and laughed, but no sound came out. Her face brightened, her lips moved, eyes sparkled, but in absolute silence, like someone had turned the sound off. She leaned one hip against Harold Gaynor, one hand on his shoulder. He encircled her waist, and the movement raised the already short dress another inch.

Could she sit down in the dress without flashing the room? Naw.

“This is Cicely,” he said. She smiled brilliantly at Bert, that little soundless laugh making her eyes sparkle. She looked at me and her eyes faltered, the smile slipped. For a second uncertainty filled her eyes. Gaynor patted her hip. The smile flamed back into place. She nodded graciously to both of us.

“I want you to raise a two-hundred-and-eighty-three-year old corpse.”

I just stared at him and wondered if he understood what he was asking.

“Well,” Bert said, “that is nearly three hundred years old. Very old to raise as a zombie. Most animators couldn’t do it at all.”

“I am aware of that,” Gaynor said. “That is why I asked for Ms. Blake. She can do it.”

Bert glanced at me. I had never raised anything that old. “Anita?”

“I could do it,” I said.

He smiled back at Gaynor, pleased.

“But I won’t do it.”

Bert turned slowly back to me, smile gone.



Gaynor was still smiling. The bodyguards were immobile. Cicely looked pleasantly at me, eyes blank of any meaning.

“A million dollars, Ms. Blake,” Gaynor said in his soft pleasant voice.

I saw Bert swallow. His hands convulsed on the chair arms. Bert’s idea of sex was money. He probably had the biggest hard-on of his life.

“Do you understand what you’re asking, Mr. Gaynor?” I asked.

He nodded. “I will supply the white goat.” His voice was still pleasant as he said it, still smiling. Only his eyes had gone dark; eager, anticipatory.

I stood up. “Come on, Bert, it’s time to leave.”

Bert grabbed my arm. “Anita, sit down, please.”

I stared at his hand until he let go of me. His charming mask slipped, showing me the anger underneath, then he was all pleasant business again. “Anita. It is a generous payment.”

“The white goat is a euphemism, Bert. It means a human sacrifice.”

My boss glanced at Gaynor, then back to me. He knew me well enough to believe me, but he didn’t want to. “I don’t understand,” he said.

“The older the zombie the bigger the death needed to raise it. After a few centuries the only death ‘big enough’ is a human sacrifice,” I said.

Gaynor wasn’t smiling anymore. He was watching me out of dark eyes. Cicely was still looking pleasant, almost smiling. Was there anyone home behind those so blue eyes? “Do you really want to talk about murder in front of Cicely?” I asked.

Gaynor beamed at me, always a bad sign. “She can’t understand a word we say. Cicely’s deaf.”

I stared at him, and he nodded. She looked at me with pleasant eyes. We were talking of human sacrifice and she didn’t even know it. If she could read lips, she was hiding it very well. I guess even the handicapped, um, physically challenged, can fall into bad company, but it seemed wrong.

“I hate a woman who talks constantly,” Gaynor said.

I shook my head. “All the money in the world wouldn’t be enough to get me to work for you.”

“Couldn’t you just kill lots of animals, instead of just one?” Bert asked. Bert is a very good business manager. He knows shit about raising the dead.

I stared down at him. “No.”

Bert sat very still in his chair. The prospect of losing a million dollars must have been real physical pain for him, but he hid it. Mr. Corporate Negotiator. “There has to be a way to work this out,” he said. His voice was calm. A professional smile curled his lips. He was still trying to do business. My boss did not understand what was happening.

“Do you know of another animator that could raise a zombie this old?” Gaynor asked.

Bert glanced up at me, then down at the floor, then at Gaynor. The professional smile had faded. He understood now that it was murder we were talking about. Would that make a difference?

I had always wondered where Bert drew the line. I was about to find out. The fact that I didn’t know whether he would refuse the contract told you a lot about my boss. “No,” Bert said softly, “no, I guess I can’t help you either, Mr. Gaynor.”

“If it’s the money, Ms. Blake, I can raise the offer.”

A tremor ran through Bert’s shoulders. Poor Bert, but he hid it well. Brownie point for him.

“I’m not an assassin, Gaynor,” I said.

“That ain’t what I heard,” Tommy of the blond hair said.

I glanced at him. His eyes were still as empty as a doll’s. “I don’t kill people for money.”

“You kill vampires for money,” he said.

“Legal execution, and I don’t do it for the money,” I said.

Tommy shook his head and moved away from the wall. “I hear you like staking vampires. And you aren’t too careful about who you have to kill to get to ‘em.”

“My informants tell me you have killed humans before, Ms. Blake,” Gaynor said.