Butch cursed. “Those stars. I know you can get them on the Web, but they can be bought locally, right?”
“Yeah, through martial-arts academies.”
“We've got a couple of those in town.”
José nodded slowly.
Butch took his keys out of his pocket. “I'll see ya.”
“Hold up—we already sent someone out to ask around. Both academies said they don't remember anyone buying them who fit the suspect's description.”
“Thanks for the tip.” Butch started for the door.
“Detective. Yo, O'Neal.” José grabbed Butch's forearm. “Damn it, will you stop for a minute?”
Butch glared over his shoulder. “Is this where you warn me to stay out of police business? 'Cause you might as well save the speech.”
“Christ, Butch, I'm not your enemy.” Jose's dark brown eyes were penetrating. “The boys and I are behind you. As far as we're concerned, you do what you need to do, and you've never been wrong. Anyone you've knocked around has deserved it. But maybe you've just been lucky, you know? What if you'd hurt someone who wasn't—”
“Cut the preacher routine. I'm not interested.” He clamped his hand on the doorknob.
José squeezed hard. “You're off the force, O'Neal. And going half-cocked into an investigation you've been removed from won't bring Janie back.”
Butch expelled his breath like he'd been punched. “You want to kick me in the nuts now, too?”
José removed his hand, looking as if he were throwing in the towel. “I'm sorry. But you gotta know that getting deeper in the weeds is only going to screw you. It's not going to help your sister. It's never helped her.”
Butch slowly shook his head. “Shit. I know that.”
“You sure?”
Yeah, he was. He'd really liked hurting Billy Riddle, and that was about vengeance for what had been done to Beth. It had nothing to do with bringing his sister back to life. Janie was gone. And she'd been gone for a long, long time.
Still, Josh's sad eyes made him feel like he had a terminal illness.
“It's gonna be fine,” he found himself saying. Although he didn't really believe it.
“Just don't… don't push your luck out there, Detective.”
Butch threw open the door. “Pushing's all I know how to do, José.”
Mr. X leaned back in his office chair, thinking about the night ahead. He was ready to try again, even though the downtown area was hot right now, what with the car bombing and the discovery of the whore's body. Trolling for vampires in the vicinity of Screamer's was going to be risky, but the risk of being caught added to the challenge.
Even more to the point, however, if you wanted to catch a shark, you didn't fish in freshwater. He had to go to where the vampires were.
Anticipation shot through him.
He'd been brushing up on his torture techniques. And this morning, before leaving for the academy, he'd visited the workspace he'd set up in his barn. His tools were gathered and gleaming: a dentist's drill set; knives of various sizes; a ball-peen hammer and a chisel; a Sawzall.
A melon bailer. For the eyes.
The trick was, of course, walking that fine line between pain and death. Pain you could stretch out for hours, days. Death was the ultimate off switch.
There was a knock at the door.
“Enter,” he said.
It was the receptionist, the jacked woman who had arms big as a man's and no breasts to speak of. Her contradictions never ceased to amaze him. In spite of the fact that a raging case of penis envy caused her to take steroids and pump iron like a gorilla, she insisted on wearing makeup. And doing her hair. In her cropped T-shirt and leggings, she looked like a bad drag queen.
She disgusted him.
You should always know who you are , he thought. And who you aren't.
“A guy's here to speak with you.” Her voice was about an octave and a half too low. “O'Neal, I think that's the name. Acts like a cop, but didn't pop a badge.”
“Tell him I'll be right out.” You freak of nature, he added to himself.
Still, Mr. X had to laugh as the door shut behind her. Him. Whatever.
Here he was, a man with no soul who killed vampires, and he was calling her a freak?
Yeah, well, at least he had a purpose. And a plan.
She was just going to Gold's Gym again tonight. Right after she got rid of her five-o'clock shadow.
It was a little before six when Butch pulled the unmarked up in front of Beth's building.