Definitely Dead
to say. Claws can do an amazing amount of damage, especially wielded with the force a tiger can exert. The guy I’d hit with the lamp was unconscious, and the one who’d reached Quinn first was possibly dead. He was certainly covered with blood and there were things exposed to the light that should have been neatly packed in his belly.
I was smiling with satisfaction when the men holding me shoved me into the back of the van, which I discovered was awash with trash and absolutely filthy. This was a high-class operation. There was a wide-mesh screen between the two front seats and the open rear, and the shelves in the rear had been emptied, I supposed for our occupancy.
I was crammed into the narrow aisle between the shelves, and Quinn was jammed in after me. They had to work hard because he was still so stunned. My two escorts were slam ming the rear van doors on the two of us as the hors de combat Weres were loaded into the other van. I was guessing the vans had been parked out on the street briefly so we wouldn’t hear the vehicles pulling into the driveway. When they were ready to load us up, our captors had pulled into the courtyard. Even the people of a brawling city like New Orleans would notice some battered bodies being loaded into vans . . . in the pouring rain.
I hoped the Weres wouldn’t think of grabbing Amelia and Bob, and I prayed that Amelia would think cleverly and hide herself, rather than do some impulsive and brave witch thing. I know it’s a contradiction, right? Praying for one thing (asking God a favor) while at the same time hoping your enemies would be killed. All I can say is, I have a feeling Christians have been doing that from the get-go—at least bad ones, like me.
“Go, go, go,” bellowed the shorter man, who’d hopped into the front seat. The driver obliged with a completely unnecessary squealing of tires, and we lurched out of the courtyard as if the president had just been shot and we had to get him to Walter Reed.
Quinn came to completely as we turned off Chloe Street to head for our final destination, wherever it might be. His hands were bound behind him, which is painful, and he hadn’t quit bleeding from the head. I’d expected him to remain groggy and shocked. But when his eyes focused on my face, he said, “Babe, they beat you bad.” I must not look too good.
“Yeah, well, you seem to be in the same boat,” I said. I knew the driver and his companion could hear us, and I didn’t give a damn.
With a grim attempt at a smile, he said, “Some defender I turned out to be.”
In the Weres’ estimation, I wasn’t very dangerous, so my hands had been bound in front. I squirmed until I was able to put pressure on the cut on Quinn’s forehead. That had to have hurt even more, but he didn’t say a word in protest. The motion of the van, the effects of the beating, and the constant shifting and smell of the trash all around us combined to make the next ten minutes very unpleasant. If I’d been very clever, I could have told which way we were going—but I wasn’t feeling very clever. I marveled that in a city with as many famed restaurants as New Orleans had, this van was awash with Burger King wrappers and Taco Bell cups. If I got a chance to rummage through the debris, I might find something useful.
“When we’re together, we get attacked by Weres,” Quinn said.
“It’s my fault,” I said. “I’m so sorry I dragged you into this.”
“Oh, yeah,” he said. “I’m known for hanging with a desperate crowd.”
We were lying face to face, and Quinn sort of nudged me with his leg. He was trying to tell me something, and I wasn’t getting it.
The two men in the front seat were talking to each other about a cute girl crossing the street at a traffic light. Just listening to the conversation was almost enough to make you swear off men, but at least they weren’t listening to us.
“Remember when we talked about my mental condition?” I said carefully. “Remember what I told you about that?”
It took him a minute because he was hurting, but he got the hint. His face squinched up as if he were about to chop some boards in half, or something else requiring all his concentration, and then his thought shoved into my head. Phone in my pocket, he told me. The problem was, the phone was in his right pocket, and he was lying on that side. There was hardly room for him to turn over.
This called for a lot of maneuvering, and I didn’t want our captors
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