“Oh, yeah,” I said, leaning against the car and crossing my legs for effect. “And in the Grist Mill Cafe, you have to buy something or Dennis-”
“No dumpink vithout eatink,” she said, exaggerating the cafe owner’s German accent. “Yeah, yeah. I’ll tell Arcturus you’re paying the bathroom tax.”
“Thanks,” I said, looking at her coveralls. “Did they pass a law banning tattoos?”
Zinaga looked at me in alarm. “No, why? Shit, have you heard something?”
“No, it’s just everyone’s covered up, even you,” I said. Zinaga specialized in light marks, so she could tattoo amazing marks on her dark skin that stood out like white glowing lines when she filled them with mana-but today you could just see a little silver scrollwork crawling up her neck. “I was hoping to see your masterwork-I never saw it finished.”
“You’ve been gone from Blood Rock too long, Dakota. It gets cold after dark,” she said, pulling her sleeve down. True enough, but in this context it felt like a lie. It wasn’t cold enough to cover up, so why was she doing it? Surely… she hadn’t ruined a tattoo so badly she felt she had to hide it? “I’m surprised you’re still here in that stupid vest-hey, what happened to your masterwork? Where’s the Dragon?”
My eyes narrowed. Interesting the way she deflected my question about her tattoos back onto me and my masterwork. She had been experimental; maybe she had ruined her tattoos, trying out some new design that had a bad interaction.
Finally I realized she was waiting for an answer and said, “I had to use it.”
“Use it?” she said. “You mean you detached it? Why? ”
I used it to defeat a serial killer who, blah, blah, blah. “It’s a long story,” I said.
She shook her head. “I’ll go tell Arcturus you’re here. You can tell him about the Dragon-I don’t want to get an earful about the sanctity of your mastermark when I haven’t even done anything. He still goes off on you from time to time whenever some random thing bothers him, and I have to sit there and listen to an hour-long rant.”
“After all these years,” I said.
“Yeah, welcome ‘home,’” she said, walking back towards the studio; Blood Rock was that small. “I expect he’s going to go off on you, so bring earplugs, or a sixpack so we have something to pass the time with.”
“I can’t stay the night,” I said. “I have a court appearance in the morning.”
“Well, you know how he is-don’t keep him waiting too long, or blow him off again,” she said, waving as she went. “Piss him off again, you could get the cold shoulder for months.”
I sighed, watching her go. It was so good to be ‘home’ again.
Then I turned to go inside-and a fist exploded in my face in a flashbulb of pain. The blow knocked me back against my car and almost off my feet. Everything blurred, then my vision resolved to see a wide, greasy bearded guy grinning at me.
“You should never have come to Blood Rock, skindancer,” he said, cracking his knuckles and throwing another punch before I could even scream.
My arms moved automatically, one curving in a block and the other popping out to clock the guy on the chin. The punch wasn’t Taido, it was older, a college Tae Kwon Do reflex. The blow knocked his head back, but he laughed it off and moved in-straight into my follow up.
This punch was Taido, with skindancing mixed in: thrown from the hip, twisting over in the last half inch, absorbing mana in my skin and discharging it with a bang on his nose. Blood sprayed, he staggered back, and I moved in with a savage, full-power kick to the ribs.
It was like kicking a telephone pole. He cried out but didn’t fall, and actually caught my leg before I could withdraw. I started punching him, single punch, double punch, triple punch, tagging him one-two-three in the skull, chest, and gut, but he shrugged them all off.
“Damn,” he said, shoving back on my leg as a van squealed behind us on the gravel. He ducked under one blow, then cried out as my followup landed on his collarbone, but still held on as feet ran up on us. “You’ve got a hell of a fight in you-for a girl.”
A fist solid as a brick connected with my temple, and suddenly I was swarmed by black-suited figures. I struggled uselessly, flashing on the one and only time I’d played football and ended up on the bottom of a pileup-groped, crushed and unable to breathe.
I was picked up bodily despite my thrashing-and then I saw the hood of a police car slide past the end of the van. I yelled as loud as I could, and as the window of the police car hove into view I saw Sheriff Steyn-who just nodded, smiled, and drove on.
Oh, God-he was in on it, whatever it was.
Everything went dark as I was hurled into the back of the van. I tried to scream again, but a leather-gloved hand pressed over my mouth. I mmphed and squirmed, but could not stop the probing fingers running over my body, picking at my pockets.
“Here are the keys. Get the car. Get the car!” a voice shouted. I kicked out, and someone howled-then a fist was planted in my gut, and the air in my lungs squeaked out my nose in a spray of blood and snot. “For God’s sake, put her out before she uses her marks!”
Then my first attacker leaned over me, blood running down his beard. “Don’t worry,” he said, grinning. “We know how to deal with skindancers.”
A stinking cloth was shoved over my face, and then- blackness.
A Taste for Vampires
Choking pain gripped my neck, and my eyes opened in terror.
I saw a black-gloved hand, clamped in a steel ring, a few feet above a floor of irregular slate flagstones. The hand flexed, and I realized it was my hand. I tried to jerk away, but my hand just twitched uselessly in the ring. I tried to flex but my black-sleeved arm just writhed against the metal armrest of a chair. I became aware of something clammy and sticky covering my whole body, even my head. I twisted and tried to stand, but just felt an immense pain in my collarbones as they pushed against something rigid clamped tightly around my neck. Panicked, I screamed-but all that came out around the huge ball shoved in my mouth was a whimper.
Oh shit, oh shit, oh shit.
Minutes of frantic struggle yielded nothing. I was wrapped from head to toe in layers of black rubber and clamped into a rigid steel chair. I couldn’t see much, but from my attempts to rock, it seemed like the chair was bolted to the floor. I was going nowhere.
A single spotlight, faint and gray, shone down on me and the chair, illuminating a small patch of slate flagstones. Beyond that was murk. I twisted as much as I could and only saw velvety blackness. No one had heard my faint whimpers-or no one had responded.
My discomfort kept building. The chair was built for someone smaller than me, and held me slumped back and scrunched sideways. I was cramped and choking, but still, I tried writhing to power my marks. But I had no tattoos on exposed skin, so what little mana I could generate burned back into my body in a surge of pain, and I sagged back against the clamps.
Then the lights came on.
Dark curtains lined the walls; metal railings hemmed in the flagstones. Before me, steps rose towards a throne sitting in front of a huge disc of stone inscribed with an elaborate ring of bloodstained roses-the Sanctuary Stone. It should have been in the Stonegrinder’s Grove, warning them that someone threatened a magician of Blood Rock. But who had it-and me?
Footsteps sounded on the dais, beyond the stone, and level with my eyes I saw a pair of fine leather boots walking confidently towards me. They were medieval yet elegant, styled to match the tailored leggings above them, Renaissance Faire as done by Giorgio Armani.
A dark velvet coat flared like a priest’s cassock as the figure stepped round the Stone, but above the straight line of the sheathed sword in the figure’s hand, the coat’s cut tightened, with subdued, elegant brocade. The figure came to a stop, and I craned my neck to look into red eyes set in a cruel young face, beneath a wiry shock of hair like a blaze of white flame.