“Your voice sounds grim.”
The laughter dribbled out of his voice. “You’re the one who said there’d be more bodies. You changed your mind on that?”
I wanted to say, yes, I’ve changed my mind, but I didn’t. “If there is a pack of rogue vampires, we’ll be seeing more bodies.”
“Can you think of anything else it could be besides vampires?” he asked.
I thought about it for a minute, and shook my head. “Not a damn thing.”
“Fine, talk to you later.” The phone buzzed dead in my hand before I could say anything. Dolph wasn’t much on hello and good-bye.
I had my back-up gun, a Firestar 9mm, in the pocket of my jacket. There was just no way to wear a holster in exercise clothes. The Firestar only held eight bullets to the Browning’s thirteen, but the Browning tended to stick out of my pocket and make people stare. Besides, if I couldn’t get the bad guys with eight bullets, another five probably wouldn’t help. Of course, there was an extra clip in the zipper pocket of my gym bag. A girl couldn’t be too cautious in these crime-ridden times.
Chapter 12
Ronnie and I were doing power circuits at Vic Tanny’s. There were two full sets of machines and no waiting at 3:14 on a Thursday afternoon. I was doing the Hip Abduction/Hip Adduction machine. You pulled a lever on the side and the machine went to different positions. The Hip Adduction position looked vaguely obscene, like a gynecological torture device. It was one of the reasons I never wore shorts when we lifted weights. Ronnie either.
I was concentrating on pressing my thighs together without making the weights clink. Weights clinking means you’re not controlling the exercise, or it means you’re working with too much weight. I was using sixty pounds. It wasn’t too heavy.
Ronnie lay on her stomach using the Leg Curl, flexing her calves over her back, heels nearly touching her butt. The muscles under her calves bunched and coiled under her skin. Neither of us is bulky, but we’re solid. Think Linda Hamilton in Terminator 2.
Ronnie finished before I did and paced around the machines waiting for me. I let the weights ease back with only the slightest clink. It’s okay to clink the weights when you’re finished.
We eased out from the machines and started running on the oval track. The track was bordered by a glass wall that showed the blue pool. A lone man was doing laps in goggles and a black bathing cap. The other side was bordered by the free weight room and the aerobics studio. The ends of the track were mirrored so you could always see yourself running face on. On bad days I could have done without watching myself; on good days it was kind of fun. A way to make sure your stride was even, arms pumping.
I told Ronnie about the vampire victim as we ran. Which meant we weren’t running fast enough. I increased my pace and could still talk. When you routinely do four miles outside in the St. Louis heat, the padded track at Vic Tanny is just not that big a challenge. We did two laps and went back to the machines.
“What did you say the victim’s name was again?” She sounded normal, no strain. I increased our pace to a flat-out run. All talking ceased.
Arm machines this time. Regular Pull-over for me, Overhead Press for Ronnie, then two laps of the track, then trade machines.
When I could talk, I answered her question. “Calvin Rupert,” I said. I did twelve pullovers with 100 pounds. Of all the machines, this one is easiest for me. Weird, huh?
“Cal Rupert?” she asked.
“That’s what his friends called him,” I said, “Why?”
She shook her head. “I know a Cal Rupert.”
I watched her and let my body do the exercise without me. I was holding my breath, which is bad. I remembered to breathe and said, “Tell me.”
“When I was asking questions around Humans Against Vampires during that rash of vampire deaths. Cal Rupert belonged to HAV.”
“Describe him for me.”
“Blond, blue or grey eyes, not too tall, well built, attractive.”
There might be more than one Cal Rupert in St. Louis, but what were the odds that they’d look that much alike? “I’ll have Dolph check it out, but if he was a member of HAV, it might mean the vampire kill was an execution.”
“What do you mean?”
“Some of HAV thinks the only good vampire is a dead vampire.” I was thinking of Humans First, Mr. Jeremy Ruebens’s little group. Had they killed a vampire already? Was this retaliation?
“I need to know if Cal was still a member of HAV or if he’d joined a new, more radical group called Humans First.”
“Catchy,” Ronnie said.
“Can you find out for me? If I go down there asking questions, they’ll burn me at the stake.”
“Always glad to help my best friend and the police at the same time. A private detective never knows when having the police owe you one may come in handy.”
“True,” I said.
I got to wait for Ronnie this time. On leg machines she was faster. Upper body was my area. “I’ll call Dolph as soon as we’re finished here. Maybe it’s a pattern? A hell of a coincidence if it’s not.”
We started around the track and Ronnie said, “So, have you decided what you’re wearing to Catherine’s Halloween party?”
I glanced at her, nearly stumbling. “Shit,” I said.
“I take that to mean you forgot about the party. You were bitching about it only two days ago.”
“I’ve been a little busy, okay?” I said. But it wasn’t all right. Catherine Maison-Gillett was one of my best friends. I’d worn a pink prom dress with puff sleeves in her wedding. It had been humiliating. We’d all told the great lie of all bridesmaids. We could cut the dress short and wear it in normal life. No way. Or I could wear it at the next formal occasion I was invited to. How many formals are you invited to once you graduate college? None. At least none where I’d willingly wear a pink, puff-sleeved, hoop-skirted, reject from Gone With the Wind.
Catherine was throwing her very first party since the wedding. The Halloween festivities started long before dark so that I could make an appearance. When someone goes to that much trouble, you have to show up. Dammit.
“I made a date for Saturday,” I said.
Ronnie stopped running and stared at me in the mirror. I kept running; if she wanted to ask questions she’d have to catch me first. She caught me.
“Did you say date?”
I nodded, saving my breath for running.
“Talk, Anita.” Her voice was vaguely threatening.
I grinned at her and told her an edited version of my meeting with Richard Zeeman. I didn’t leave out much, though.
“He was naked in a bed the first time you saw him?” She was cheerfully outraged.
I nodded.
“You do meet men in the most interesting places,” she said.
We were jogging on the track again. “When’s the last time I met a man?”
“What about John Burke?”
“Other than him,” Jerks did not count.
She thought about that for a minute. She shook her head. “Too long.”
“Yep,” I said.
We were on our last machine, the last two laps, then stretching, showers, and done. I didn’t really enjoy exercising. Neither did Ronnie. But we both needed to be in good shape so we could run away from the bad guys, or run them down. Though I hadn’t chased after many villains lately. I seemed to do a lot more running away.
We moved over to the open area near the racquetball courts and the tanning rooms. It was the only place with enough room to stretch out. I always stretched before and after exercising. I’d had too many injuries not to be careful.
I started rotating the neck slowly; Ronnie followed me. “I guess I’ll have to cancel the date.”
“Don’t you dare,” Ronnie said. “Invite him to the party.”
I looked at her. “You’ve got to be kidding. A first date surrounded by people he doesn’t know.”
“Who do you know besides Catherine?” she asked.
She had a point there. “I’ve met her new husband.”