. . whatever you’ve found him in.”
“My vampire hole,” I explained. “See? In here.” I led the way into the bedroom and opened the closet. I knelt with some difficulty and reached in for the hidden lever Eric had had installed. It hitched up the edge of the false floor. Then it was easy to work my fingers under the edge and hoist it up, especially when Mr. Cataliades knelt beside me to help. The lid came up easily and we swung it out of the closet. We looked down into Copley Carmichael’s face. He wasn’t as angry as before, but that might have been because he’d spent some more hours in there. The hole had been made for a night’s shelter for a vampire, not for a permanent resting place. An adult could lie down in it in a fetal position, without curling up tightly. At least it was deep enough that he could sit up with his back against the wall.
“Luckily for him, he is not a tall man,” said Mr. Cataliades.
“Small in stature, large in venom,” I said. Mr. C chuckled.
“He’sasnakeallright,” Diantha said. “He’sinprettybadshape.”
“Shall we hoist him out?” Mr. Cataliades suggested.
I moved out of the way so Diantha could take my place. “I’m not much up to hoisting,” I explained. “Shot.”
“Yes, we heard,” Mr. C said. “Glad you’re better. We’ve been tracking various people.”
“Okay, you’ll have to fill me in,” I said. For two creatures who’d come to help me, they were certainly matter-of-fact about my getting shot. And who’d they been tracking? Had they been successful? Where had they spent the night before?
And where was Barry?
With no apparent effort, the two pulled Copley Carmichael up out of the hole and propped him against the wall.
“Excuse me,” I said to Mr. Cataliades, who was looking at Amelia’s father with a speculative gleam in his eye. “Where is Barry Bellboy?”
“He detected a familiar brain signature,” Mr. Cataliades said absently. He checked Copley’s pulse with a large finger. Diantha squatted to peer into the captive’s eyes curiously. “He told us he’d catch up with us later.”
“How did he tell you this?”
“Via text messaging,” Mr. Cataliades said distastefully. “While we were following a false trail for Glassport.”
My teeth were on edge. “Should we be worried about him?”
“He’s got his car and a cell phone,” Diantha said slowly and carefully. “And he has our numbers. Uncle, did you check your other messages?”
Mr. Cataliades made a face. “No, Sookie’s news startled me so much I gave up on doing so.” He brought out his phone and began looking at it and pressing things on the screen. “This man is dehydrated and bruised, but he doesn’t have internal injuries,” he told me, nodding toward our captive.
“What am I supposed to do with him?”
“Whateveryouwant,” Diantha said, with a certain amount of glee.
Copley Carmichael’s eyes widened with fear.
“Of course, he did try to have me killed,” I said thoughtfully. “And he didn’t care who got caught up in his vendetta against me. Hey, Mr. Carmichael, you see this big bandage on my shoulder? That’s courtesy of your man Tyrese. He almost got your daughter, too.” The man’s color wasn’t good, but it got worse. “And you know what happened to Tyrese? He got shot dead,” I said.
But this wasn’t a pastime I could really call fun. Even though Carmichael deserved a lot of bad things, taunting him would not make me feel better about myself or anything else.
“I wonder if he’s responsible for the voodoo doll, or whatever it was, in Alcee’s car,” I said.
I watched his face carefully as I said this, and all I got was a blank stare. I did not believe Copley had put a hex or curse on the detective.
Mr. Cataliades said, “Yes, I do have a message from Barry. Voice mail.” He held the phone to his ear.
I waited impatiently.
Finally, Mr. Cataliades lowered the phone. He looked serious. “Barry says he is following Johan Glassport,” he said. “That is not a safe thing to do.”
“Barry knows Glassport killed Arlene,” I said. “He shouldn’t take the chance.”
“He wants to identify Glassport’s companion.”
“Where was he when he left the message?” I asked.
“He doesn’t say. But he left the message at nine last night.”
“That’s bad,” I said. “Really bad.” The problem was, I couldn’t think of anything to do about it, and I couldn’t imagine what to do with Copley Carmichael.
A knock at my door startled us all. I was definitely distracted. I hadn’t even heard a car come up the driveway.