that, but the idea that the only skill set I have is sex is just jealousy."
"What do you mean?" he asked.
"Most of the preternatural branch is male. They actually have a lower percentage of female marshals than the regular branch. Men don't want to admit that a little bitty girl is kicking their asses in the field. They need me not to be better at their job than they are, and the only way they can explain my having the highest number of executions in the entire service is to tell themselves that if they were a woman and could sleep their way to the top it would make all the difference."
"You are a little bitty thing. You look dainty as my youngest daughter. I've read your cases. I know what you've managed to kill. You've been called in on cases where the first marshals were hospitalized, or killed outright. You, Marshal Forrester, Marshal Spotted-Horse, and Marshal Jefferies are the go-to guys for cleaning up the mess."
The "Otto Jefferies" identity was to Olaf what "Ted Forrester" was to Edward. Olaf was scarier than Edward, though, because among the mercenary stuff his hobby was being a serial killer. He'd promised Edward and some part of some government that he wouldn't do his hobby on American soil. It was one of the ways he kept his day job helping train some uber-secret unit. His victims of choice were petite dark-haired women. He seemed to have a crush on me now, and had flat-out told me he'd be willing to try for normal sex with me, or at least sex that didn't involve my being tortured and dead. Edward wanted me to encourage the attraction, because it was the closest to healthy Olaf had ever been around a woman, but we both agreed that the line between being Olaf's serial killer girlfriend as we killed vampires together, and triggering his own serial killer needs toward me, was probably a thin one. Bernardo Spotted-Horse, like me, just had one name, our real names. Neither of us had ever made a living doing things as harsh as Edward and Olaf.
"We do what we can," I said.
"They all have military backgrounds, special forces. They're all big, physically imposing men."
"Ted is only five-eight, not that imposing," I said.
Raborn smiled. "Marshal Forrester seems taller."
I smiled, too. "That he does."
"Sometimes, so do you."
I just looked at him. "Thanks, I guess."
"Do the vampires really call you 'the Executioner'?"
I shrugged. "Nicknames."
"Just answer the question," he said.
"Fine, I've killed more of them than any other vampire hunter. When you kill enough people, it tends to impress the survivors."
"You can't be as good at killing as your reputation."
"Why not?" I asked.
"Because if you were, you couldn't be human." He gave me that flat, searching gaze.
"My blood work is on record."
"You carry, at last count, five different types of lycanthropy, which isn't possible. The whole idea of lycanthropy is that once you get it, you can't catch anything else."
"Yeah, I'm a medical miracle."
"How can you carry active lycanthropy and not shapeshift?"
"Just lucky, I guess." Actually, I didn't know for sure, but we'd begun to suspect it was the vampire marks that I carried as Jean-Claude's human servant. It was as if his control and inability to change shape were shared with me. I didn't care what kept me from shifting; I was just happy for it. If I ever shifted for real, I'd lose my badge. I'd be considered unfit for duty due to disability.
"It makes you more than human-strong, though, doesn't it?"
"You'll turn a girl's head complimenting me like that," I said.
"I've seen your fitness reports, Blake; don't be coy."
"Then you know I can pretty much lift weight until the mass of the weight to be lifted exceeds my body mass. Any other questions?"
He looked at me and tapped his finger on the edge of the file that had held the photos. "Not right now."
"Good." I stood up.
"The preternatural branch of the service is becoming more and more its own unit; did you know there's talk of forming a new branch of service altogether?"
"I've heard the rumor," I said, looking down at him.
"Some of the preternatural branch marshals are just killers with badges."
"Yep," I said.
"Why do you think the powers that be let you all run wild like this?"
I looked down at him. It seemed like a real question. "I don't know for sure, but if I had to guess I'd say they're making us into a legal hit squad. They give us