“Give us a name, we’re good at finding people,” Manning said.
“Dominga Salvador; she was the most powerful vaudun priestess in the Midwest.”
“She went missing just after she challenged you.”
I raised eyebrows at Manning. “Challenged me? You mean sent killer zombies into my apartment to kill me? If that’s your definition of challenge, then okay.”
“Some of the local law enforcement officers thought you’d killed her in self-defense.”
“The local LEOs didn’t trust me as much before I had a badge.”
“I trusted you,” Zerbrowski said.
I smiled at him. “You liked me; I don’t know if you trusted me.”
He grinned and seemed to think about it. “I can’t remember for sure, but I know that long before you got your own badge you proved anything you needed to prove to me.”
“Aw shucks, Zerbrowski, you’re going to make a girl blush.”
He grinned wider and offered me his fist. I bumped it gently.
“Nice distraction there, Sergeant,” Manning said.
“I don’t know what you mean, Agent,” he said.
Her lips curled down in a face that said, clearly, she knew that he knew exactly what he’d done. “It’s going to take more than that to distract me.”
“And that’s the truth,” Brent said. His partner gave him an unfriendly look and he held his hands out empty, as if to say he didn’t mean any harm.
“Why do you think Dominga Salvador is dead?” Manning asked.
“Because I’m alive, and once a person like the Señora wants you dead she doesn’t give up.”
“How do you think she died?”
I tried to appear nonchalant and was glad that I did better blank cop face than I had years ago when I’d known Dominga Salvador, because I was about to tell a very big lie to the FBI. “I have no idea.” I could feel my pulse speed in my throat; if I’d been on a polygraph I’d have failed.
Manning studied my face like she’d memorize the number of eyelashes I had. I stayed blank and slightly smiling, and felt my eyes dead and empty as last year’s New Year’s resolutions. I wanted to look away from her so badly it almost hurt, but I didn’t. I knew exactly how Dominga Salvador had died, because I had killed her.
4
I DIDN’T FEEL bad about the death, because she’d been trying to force me to murder someone else as a human sacrifice at the time, but it was still technically murder. She’d also been the first person I ever killed with zombies that I’d raised from the grave, which was still an automatic death sentence. It fell under the magical malfeasance laws; any practitioner of psychic or supernatural gifts who used such as a method of murder, or violence outside self-defense parameters, was subject to the strictest enforcement of the laws therein. Strictest enforcement was execution, which is pretty damned strict.
It helped me meet Manning’s eyes and control everything but my pulse. I even got a handle on that by thinking about quieting my breathing for shooting accuracy. Calm your breathing, and your heartbeat has to follow, eventually, and with that, your pulse will slow, eventually.
“My grandmother would have said butter wouldn’t melt in your mouth, Marshal.”
“I’ve never understood that saying; I mean, I know it implies you think I’m lying, but why would butter not melt in someone’s mouth, and what has that got to do with being truthful?”
Manning frowned at me.
“I think it implies you’re cold-blooded, or something,” Brent said.
We all looked at him.
He had the grace to look embarrassed. “Blake asked, and my gran used to say it, too.”
“Just stop talking,” Manning said.