magic. Watching the show this up close and personal made me shiver just a bit. The ease with which he switched back and forth was just plain creepy.
The man in the doorway was short, not many inches above me, maybe five foot six at best. I wondered if their police force didn't have a height requirement. His hair was a golden sun-streaked blond cut very short and close to his square-jawed face. He was tanned a nice soft gold, as if it were as dark a tan as his pale skin were capable of. First Donna, now the lieutenant. Didn't anyone sweat skin cancer here? He looked at me with green-gold eyes, the color of new spring leaves. They were beautiful eyes with long golden lashes and softened his face to an almost feminine appearance. Only the masculine jut of the jaw saved him from being one of those men who is beautiful instead of handsome. The jaw both ruined his face and saved it from perfection.
The eyes may have been lovely, but they weren't friendly. It wasn't even the coolness of cop eyes. It was hostile. Since I'd never met him before, it had to be the fact that I was a woman, a civilian, and/or an animator. He was either a chauvinist or superstitious. I wasn't sure which I preferred.
He let me have a nice long dose of glaring. I just gave blank face, waiting for him to get tired of it. I could stand there all day and be peacefully blank. Standing in a nice safe hospital corridor wasn't even close to the worst thing I'd had to do lately. It was always sort of peaceful when no one was trying to kill me.
Edward tried to break the stalemate. "Lieutenant Marks, this is Anita Blake. Chief Appleton called you about her." He was still using Ted's happy voice, but there was a set to his shoulders that was stiff and not so happy.
"You're Anita Blake." Lieutenant Marks managed to sound doubtful.
I nodded. "Yep."
His eyes narrowed. "I don't like civilians messing in my case." He jerked a thumb at Edward. "Forrester here has proven himself valuable." He pointed a finger at me. "You haven't."
Edward started to saysomething, but Marks but him off with a sharp movement of his hand. "No, let her answer for herself."
"I'll answer a question if you'll ask one," I said.
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"It means you haven't asked a question yet, Lieutenant. You've just made statements."
"I don't need shit from some fucking zombie queen."
Ah, he was prejudiced. One mystery solved. "I was invited down here, Lieutenant Marks. I was invited to help you solve this case. Now if you don't want my help, fine, but I'll need someone from the city government to explain to my boss why the hell I got on a plane to New Mexico when I wasn't sure of my welcome."
"I don't treat you right and you run to powers that be, is that it?"
I shook my head. "Who got your panties in a twist, Marks?"
He frowned. "What?'
"Do I remind you of your ex-wife?'
"I'm married to my only wife." He sounded indignant.
"Congratulations. Is it the voodoo that I use to raise the dead? Are you nervous around the mystical arts?"
"I don't like black magic." He fingered the cross-shaped tie tack that was standard police issue almost everywhere, but somehow I thought Marks was serious about it.
"I don't do black magic, Marks." I drew on the silver chain around my neck until the crucifix spilled into the light. "I'm Christian, Episcopalian actually. I don't know what you've heard about what I do, but it's not evil."
"You would say that," he said.
"The state of my immortal soul is between God and myself, Lieutenant Marks. Judge not lest ye be judged yourself. Or do you skip that part and just keep the parts you like?"
His face darkened, and a vein in his forehead started to pulse. This level of anger, even if he was a right-winger Christian extremist, was over the top. "What in hell is behind that door to have you both so spooked?" I asked.
Marks blinked at me. "I am not spooked."
I shrugged. "Yeah, you are. You're all bent out of shape about the survivors. And you're taking it out on me."
"You don't know me," he said.
"No, but I know a lot of policemen, and I know when someone's scared."
He stepped close enough to me that if it had been a fight, I'd have stepped back, put space between us. Instead,