I could still hear Coyote’s laughter in the night. It dissolved into high-pitched coyote yips and then faded on the wind.
BLOOD DEBT
JEANNE C. STEIN
ONE
“I’VE GOT HIM.”
I’m off like a bullet across the dark parking lot. The guy I’m chasing, a skip wanted in L.A. for drug trafficking, runs like he’s used to it. Head up, long strides, hands pumping. And he’s fast.
Trouble is, he doesn’t know what’s chasing him.
I hear my partners, David and Tracey, fall behind. Good. I can kick in with the vampire speed and—
A car door opens right in front of me. Smacks me square in the chest and I go down like I’ve been shot.
Shit.
I jump up and shake my head clear. David and Tracey pound past me.
“You okay?” David says over his shoulder.
I’m looking at the guy who coldcocked me. “Yeah. Get Smith.”
That guy is looking at the guy still running. “I’ll call the cops,” he yells, brandishing a cell phone.
“What the hell are you doing?” I’ve grabbed his wrist, yanking the phone out of his hand. A car door can’t kill a vampire, but getting whacked by one can sure as hell cause pain. Right now my ribs are screaming like a son of a bitch.
“Stopping a mugging,” he says, trying to free himself from my grip.
He can’t. For the first time, a glimmer of uncertainty shadows his face. “You’re strong.”
“Yeah, I know.” I release him, toss the phone into the lot. When I turn back, he’s eyeing me and I return the favor. Late thirties, good suit, good shoes, good haircut. Looks like he might be a salesman at Men’s Wearhouse.
“We weren’t mugging that guy. We were trying to arrest him.”
His eyes narrow. “You guys are cops?”
“Not exactly.”
He takes a step backward. “Not exactly? You’re either cops or you’re not.”
I’m looking for David and Tracey. As a vampire, I have excellent night vision. But I can’t see through buildings, and from the echo of running feet they’re around the corner of a building in the far end of the lot.
“Shit. I’ve got to go.”
“I don’t think so.”
I turn and find myself staring into the barrel of a nice little .22. The guy has it pointed at my chest. I release a breath of exasperation. “Look. I told you I’m not a mugger. I’m a fugitive apprehension officer. A bounty hunter. And my partners may be in trouble. Now point that gun somewhere else, or I’ll take it from you and stick it up your ass so far, you’ll be shitting bullets.”
“Big talk,” he says. But I notice his hand is not quite so steady. “No, you and I are going to—”
He doesn’t get a chance to finish. I have the gun out of his hand so fast his brain can’t process what happened. He’s still staring at where the gun used to be. His eyes flick back and forth from his empty hand to mine—and the gun now pointing at his chest.
“How’d you do that?”
“Just get in your car and get out of here.”
He doesn’t wait for me to say it twice. He slips behind the wheel and cranks over the engine. I step away and slam the door.
But like most pain-in-the-ass bystanders, he has to get the last word. “I’m still going to call the police,” he yells back, gunning the car out of the parking lot with a squeal of rubber.
I see David and Tracey at the far end of the lot walking back toward me. Just the two of them.
“You do that,” I say quietly to the departing car.
Fucking-A.
The skip got away.
I stick the gun I took from the now-fleeing driver into the pocket of my jacket.
Over my shoulder, a sound.
A laugh? Or a growl?
I whirl around.
Vampire senses spring to alert. Nothing. Nothing moving, nothing breathing. No supernatural blips on my internal radar screen. Was it my imagination?
But the echo hangs in the air before the sound fades away like fog in the sun.
TRACEY AND DAVID beat me into the office the next day. The mood is glum. I walk straight over to our gun safe in the corner of the office and work the combination. Stick the .22 inside and twirl the lock.
“Where’d that come from?” David asks.
“Took it off our good Samaritan last night. So, what’s up?”
David slaps the flat of his hand on a folded newspaper. “The cops picked Smith up. Fucking civilian cost us a bounty.”
“And I’m fine, by the way,” I say with mild amusement. “Thanks for asking.”
David blows out a breath. “You’re tough. The minute I saw you on your feet, I knew you were okay.”
He’s a big guy, a former pro–football player who has some experience with on-the-job accidents. His philosophy is if you can get up on your own after being hit, you’re still in the game.
Tracey isn’t so sure.
“Did you get yourself checked out?” she asks. “That door clocked you pretty good.”
She’s a tough one, too. An ex-cop who’s tall and willowy as a whippet but with the staying power of a pit bull. She signed on as a partner a little over three months ago. Her concern makes me smile. Neither of them knows that I’m a vampire. Nothing short of a stake in the heart or a well-aimed ax to the head can put me down permanently.
“I’m fine. Really.” I pick up a pile of flyers hot off the fax and fan them. “Anything promising here?”
“Maybe one.” David takes the flyers from me and pulls out a single sheet. “Not as big a payday as the one we lost last night but better than nothing.”
He hands it over. An arson suspect skipped bond and was last seen in Phoenix. He’s got a ten-thousand-dollar bounty on his head. I look up. “Phoenix? In August?”
“Yeah.” David frowns. “I know. That’s why I think we should flip to see which one of us accompanies Tracey—”
“Accompanies Tracey?” Her voice croaks a protest. “Why don’t I get a shot at that coin toss?”
“Because you’re the rookie.” David fishes a coin out of his pocket, flips it with one hand, slaps it down on the back of his other. He looks at me. “Call it.”
“Heads.”
He peeks. “Shit. Okay, Tracey. Go pack an overnight case. We leave in thirty minutes.”
TWO
AN HOUR LATER, DAVID AND TRACEY ARE ON the road, and I’m alone enjoying my little victory. I pick up the newspaper and take it out to the deck that spans the back length of our office. It’s Saturday so most of the other offices on our block are closed. We’re situated on Pacific Highway a stone’s throw from Seaport Village. Traffic noise and the chatter of tourists mingle with the shrill, sharp squawk of scavenging seagulls. The deck hangs over San Diego Bay. It’s noon and the sun is high in the sky, bouncing off bobbing sailboats and turning speedboat wakes into bright silver froth. The kind of day San Diego is famous for. Mild. Sunny. Beautiful to behold.
A thousand times better than the desert hell David and Tracey are headed for.
I plop into a chair, congratulating myself on my good luck. All I have to do is mind the office for an hour or two and then I’ll take the afternoon off. I shake open the newspaper. Read the article about the one that got away. Smith was picked up two hours after we lost him, in a bar, recognized by someone who saw his picture on the news. No mention of our run-in with him or of any indignant citizen complaining that three “muggers” had assaulted him in a parking lot.
The chase replays in my head. I rub at my ribs—reflex really, now there’s not even a mark left to show that I got whacked by that car door. Wonder what the guy in the car was doing there at 2 A.M.? The mall stores had been closed for hours, no bars or restaurants in the area. He took a chance insinuating himself in a situation he knew nothing about. There’s no way he could have missed the fact that there were three of us.