Kate Daniels 01 - Magic Bites
the blackness of bloody tissue. Someone had used a very sharp knife to cleave the cartilage of several ribs on the left side, separating them from the sternum, not sawing but slicing in a single motion with awful force. The vamp must have been turned on its side to allow the stringy clot of its nearly atrophied intestines to fall out. There was no fat attached to the intestines, so the killer didn’t have to bother with cutting it. Same with the bladder and colon; both organs had atrophied within weeks of undeath, so he didn’t have to deal with the mess.
The diaphragm was neatly slit, both to remove the remaining intestines and to gain access to the esophagus. He must have peeled back the diaphragm and worked his hand up the chest cavity until he could grab the esophagus and cut it. Then he simply had to pull the esophagus out through the hole, and the blood-soaked, useless lungs and bulging heart would come out with it. I’ve seen this before. That’s how you gutted a deer.
“He took the brain, the heart, the lungs, what was left of the liver and kidneys, but discarded the intestines,” Ghastek said.
I raised an eyebrow, since I didn’t see the intestines, and he murmured, “The next photograph.”
I looked and saw the ugly wet clump of innards in a puddle of blood. Unused, they had shrunk until they resembled tough twine.
“Admirable skill,” Ghastek said dryly. “The cuts were made with almost surgical precision. He has an excellent knowledge of the vampiric physiology.”
“Any chance of it being an inside job?”
Ghastek looked at me as if I had accused him of devouring small children.
“We are not stupid,” he said, meaning I’m not stupid .
“All of our people with that degree of skill are accounted for.”
“Besides this one and the shadow, how many did you lose?” I asked.
“Four.”
“Four? Four vampires?”
Ghastek shifted uncomfortably, looking as if he had tasted something slimy and sour. “We aren’t happy about the situation.”
“Where are the other photos?”
“We have none. The others were taken. We were not able to recover the bodies.”
“What do you mean, taken?”
“Something killed them instantly, severing the link between their minds and the navigators who piloted them. Then their bodies were removed before our field team was able to recover them.” He produced a piece of paper covered with neat typescript. “Here’s the list of the locations, dates, and times.”
Derek took the list from him and gave it to me. I glanced at it and put it in my pocket. Six vampires and seven shapechangers. Someone was trying to start a war between the Pack and the People and was doing a damn good job of it. Who would benefit from it?
“You’re out six vampires and you can account for only two of the bodies. Are you positive that the other four aren’t active?” The idea of four unpiloted vamps running around the city made me hurt with dread.
“They are deceased , Kate!” Nataraja snapped out of his reverie. “Why don’t you ask Curran and his pet lympago what was done to our property?”
A lympago was an inaccurate term to use for Corwin but Nate seemed so happy to have found it that I let him wallow in his own ignorance.
“I spoke to the Pack,” I said. “I’ve been able to clear Corwin to my satisfaction.”
“That’s not good enough for me,” Nataraja said.
“It’ll have to do.” All of this verbal fencing strained my patience. “His m-scan didn’t match.”
“I saw the m-scan of the crime scene,” Ghastek said, coming to life like a shark sensing blood in the water. “There was no power print except for our vampire and the diviner.”
Shit. Me and my big mouth. I should carry a banner with a big sign, “Confidential Information Given Away Free!” At least it would let people know upfront who they were dealing with.
“You must not have been looking at the right m-scan. The one I saw had a clear power record of the murderer.”
I could almost feel that formidable brain working behind Ghastek’s eyes. “Would you be willing to provide us with a copy of this other m-scan?”
“Would you be willing to tell me why the hell your shadow vampire was tailing Feldman?”
“Perhaps we merely wanted to keep an eye on the diviner,” Nataraja said.
I pretended to consider it. “No. I don’t buy it. Keeping a vamp in the field is too expensive for casual surveillance.”
“We have nothing further to discuss,” Nataraja
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