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 [Anita Blake 17] - Skin Trade
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    Table of Contents
   Title Page
   Copyright Page
   Dedication
   Acknowledgements
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Chapter 13
   Chapter 14
   Chapter 15
   Chapter 16
   Chapter 17
   Chapter 18
   Chapter 19
   Chapter 20
   Chapter 21
   Chapter 22
   Chapter 23
   Chapter 24
   Chapter 25
   Chapter 26
   Chapter 27
   Chapter 28
   Chapter 29
   Chapter 30
   Chapter 31
   Chapter 32
   Chapter 33
   Chapter 34
   Chapter 35
   Chapter 36
   Chapter 37
   Chapter 38
   Chapter 39
   Chapter 40
   Chapter 41
   Chapter 42
   Chapter 43
   Chapter 44
   Chapter 45
   Chapter 46
   Chapter 47
   Chapter 48
   Chapter 49
   Chapter 50
   Chapter 51
   Chapter 52
   Chapter 53
   Chapter 54
   Chapter 55
   Chapter 56
   Chapter 57
   Chapter 58
   Chapter 59
   Chapter 60
   Chapter 61
   Chapter 62
   Chapter 63
   Chapter 64
   Chapter 65
   Chapter 66
   Chapter 67
   Chapter 68
   Chapter 69
   Chapter 70
   Chapter 71
   Chapter 72
   Chapter 73
   Chapter 74
   Epilogue
   Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter novels by Laurell K. Hamilton
   GUILTY PLEASURES
   THE LAUGHING CORPSE
   CIRCUS OF THE DAMNED
   THE LUNATIC CAFE
   BLOODY BONES
   THE KILLING DANCE
   BURNT OFFERINGS
   BLUE MOON
   OBSIDIAN BUTTERFLY
   NARCISSUS IN CHAINS
   CERULEAN SINS
   INCUBUS DREAMS
   MICAH
   DANSE MACABRE
   THE HARLEQUIN
   BLOOD NOIR
   SKIN TRADE
   STRANGE CANDY
   A BERKLEY BOOK
   Published by the Penguin Group
   Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
   375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, USA
   Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto, Ontario M4P 2Y3, Canada
   (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)
   Penguin Books Ltd., 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   Penguin Group Ireland, 25 St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin 2, Ireland (a division of Penguin Books Ltd.)
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   (a division of Pearson Australia Group Pty. Ltd.)
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   (a division of Pearson New Zealand Ltd.)
   Penguin Books (South Africa) (Pty.) Ltd., 24 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank, Johannesburg 2196, South Africa
   Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
   This book is an original publication of The Berkley Publishing Group.
   This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
   Copyright © 2009 by Laurell K. Hamilton
   All rights reserved.
   No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
   BERKLEY is a registered trademark of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
   The “B” design is a trademark belonging to Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
   Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
   Hamilton, Laurell K.
   p. cm.
   eISBN : 978-1-101-05736-0
   1. Blake, Anita (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Vampires—Fiction. I. Title.
   PS3558.A443357S55 2009
   813’.54—dc22 2009006735
   http://us.penguingroup.com
   To Jonathon,
   who understands that I’m a moody bastard, but loves me anyway.
   Some days he loves me because of it. Of course, it takes one to know one.
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   To everyone who keeps hanging in there: Darla, Sherry, Mary, and Teresa. Merrilee, my agent, for never giving up. Susan, my editor, who often surprises me with her insights. Everyone at Marvel who works on the Anita Blake comic series. A team, at last. Shawn, who answered nearly endless questions about police work, and when he didn’t know the answers, admitted it and helped me find other experts to talk to. Thanks for having our backs in Vegas. Robin, who helped calm me down. Blessed be. Thanks to Kathy, who helped us out at the last Wolf Howl. Charles, we’ll miss seeing you at all the events, but life moves on, and new goals need pursuing. Good luck on getting your degree. Daven and Wendi, thanks for the hospitality and the hugs. Sharon Shinn, because no one else understands the panic. To all the rest of the Alternate Historians: Deborah Millitello, Tom Drennan, Mark Sumner, and Marella Sands—good friends, good writers, what more could one ask? To Las Vegas Metro SWAT, thanks to all of you, because I was told that it’s about the team, not the individuals, and who am I to argue with a team that works this well. Thanks to Bill, Alane, Nicole, and REM, who showed us around the Clark County Coroner’s office. It was great meeting everyone in Vegas; you all made us feel very welcome. Thank you. Any mistakes in the book are mine and mine alone, because there wasn’t time for everyone to read over the manuscript, but the help I received in Vegas helped keep the mistakes to a minimum. Thanks, everyone.
   Sudden and swift and light as that
   The ties gave,
   And he learned of finalities
   Besides the grave.
   —From “The Impulse” by Robert Frost (The Hill Wife, 1922)
   1
   I’D WORKED MY share of serial killer cases, but none of the killers had ever mailed me a human head. That was new. I looked down at the head, ghostly, through the plastic bag it was wrapped in. It sat on my desk, on top of the desk blotter, like hundreds of other packages that had been delivered to Animators Inc., where our motto was Where the Living Raise the Dead for a Killing. The head had been packed in ice, for all the world like some employee of the postal service had done it. Maybe they had; vampires can be very persuasive, and it was a vampire who had sent the package. A vampire named Vittorio. He’d included a letter with my name written on the envelope in lovely calligraphy: Anita Blake. He wanted me to know who to thank for my little surprise.
 He and his people had slaughtered over ten people in St. Louis alone before he fled to parts unknown. Well, not unknown now, maybe. There was a return address on the package. It had been mailed from Las Vegas, Nevada.
   Either Vittorio was still there, or it would be another of his disappearing acts. Was he in Las Vegas, or had he mailed it from there and would be somewhere else by the time I gave the information to the police there?
   No way to know. I could still hear our daytime secretary, Mary, being hysterical in the other room. Luckily we had no clients in the office. I was about thirty minutes away from my first client of the day, and my appointment had been the first of the day for Animators Inc.; lucky. Mary could have her breakdown while our business manager, Bert, tried to calm her. Maybe I should have helped, but I was a U.S. Marshal, and business had to come first. I had to call Vegas and tell them they might have a serial killer in town. Happy fucking Monday.
   I sat down at my desk, the phone in my hand, but didn’t dial it. I stared at the pictures of other people’s families on my desk. Once the shared desk had been empty, just files mingling in the drawers, but first Manny Rodriguez brought in his family portrait. It was the one that every family seems to have, where people are too serious, and only one or two manage a good smile. Manny looked stiff and uncomfortable in his suit and tie. Left to his own devices he always forgot the tie, but Rosita, his wife, who was inches taller than he, and more inches wider than his slender form, would have insisted on the tie. She usually got her way on stuff like that. Manny wasn’t exactly henpecked, but he wasn’t exactly the voice of authority in his house either.
   Their two girls, Mercedes and Consuela (Connie), were very grown-up, standing tall and straight with their father’s delicate build, and their faces so pretty, they shone in the shadow of Rosita’s older, heavier face. His daughters made me see what he might have seen all those years ago when Rosita, “little rose,” must have matched her name. Their son, Tomas, was still a child, still in elementary school. Was he in third grade now, or fourth? I couldn’t remember.
   The other picture was a pair of photos in one of those hinged frames. One picture was of Larry Kirkland and his wife, Detective Tammy Reynolds, on their wedding day. They were looking at each other like they saw something wonderful, all shiny and full of promise. The other photo was of them with their daughter, Angelica, who had quickly become simply Angel. The baby had her father’s curls, like an auburn halo around her head. He kept his orange-red hair cut so short there were no curls, but Tammy’s brown hair had darkened Angel’s, so that it was auburn. It was a little more brown, a little less red, than Nathaniel’s auburn hair.
   Should I bring a picture of Nathaniel and Micah and me in, to put on the desk? I knew that the other animators at Animators Inc. had pictures of their families on their desks, too.
   But, of course, would I need more pictures? If I brought a picture of me with the two men, then did I need to bring a picture of me with my other sweeties? When you’re sort of living with, at last count, four men, and dating another five or six, who goes in the pictures?
   I felt nothing about the package on my desk. I wasn’t scared or disgusted. I felt nothing but a huge, vast emptiness inside me, almost like the silence that my head went to when I pulled the trigger on someone. Was I handling this really well, or was I in shock? Hmm, I couldn’t tell, which meant it was probably some version of shock. Great.
   I stood up and looked at the head in its plastic wrap and thought, No pictures of my boyfriends, not at work. I’d had a handful of clients who had turned out to be bad guys, and girls. I didn’t want them seeing pictures of people I loved. Never give the bad guys ideas; they find enough awful things to do without giving them clues.
   No, no personal photos at work. Bad idea.
   I dialed Information, because I’d never talked to the Las Vegas police force before. It was a chance to make new friends, or piss off a whole new set of people; with me, it could go either way. I didn’t do it on purpose, but I did have a tendency to rub people the wrong way. Part of it was being a woman in a predominantly male field; part of it was simply my winning personality.
   I sat back down, so I couldn’t see inside the box. I’d already called my local police. I wanted forensics to do the box, find some clues, help us catch this bastard. Whose head was it, and why did I get the prize? Why send it to me? Was it a sign that he held a grudge about me killing so many of his vampires when they were slaughtering people in our town, or did it mean something else, something that would never, ever, occur to me to think?
   There are a lot of good profilers working on serials, but I think they miss one thing. You can’t really think like these people. You just can’t. You can try. You can crawl into their heads so far that you feel like you’ll never be clean again, but in the end, unless you are one, you can’t really understand what motivates them. And they are selfish creatures, caring only about their own pleasure, their own pathology. Serial killers don’t help you catch other serial killers unless it helps their agenda. Of course, there were people who said that I was a serial killer. I still had the highest kill count of all the legal vampire executioners in the United States. I’d topped a hundred this year. Did it really matter that I didn’t enjoy my kills? Did it really change anything that I took no sexual pleasure from it? Did it matter that in the beginning I’d thrown up? Did the fact that I’d had an order of execution for most of my kills make them better, less brutal? There were serial killers who had used only poison, which caused almost no pain; they’d been less brutal than me. Lately, I’d begun to wonder exactly what set me apart from people like Vittorio. I’d begun to question if to my oh-so-legal victims it mattered what my motives were.
   A woman answered the phone in Las Vegas, and I began the process of getting passed up the line to the person who might be able to tell me whose head I had in the box.
   2
   UNDERSHERIFF RUPERT SHAW had a rough voice; either he’d been yelling a lot, or he’d smoked way too much, for way too many years. “Who did you say this was?” he asked.
   I sighed, and repeated for the umpteenth time, “I am U.S. Marshal Anita Blake. I need to talk to someone in charge, and I guess that would be you, Sheriff Shaw.”
   “I will kick the ass of whoever gave your name to the media.”
   “What are you talking about, Sheriff?”
   “You didn’t hear about the message from the media?”
   “If you mean television or radio, I haven’t had either on. Is there something I should know?”
   “How did you know to call us, Marshal?”
   I sat back in my chair, totally puzzled. “I get the feeling that if I hadn’t called you, you’d be calling me, Sheriff Shaw.”
   “How did you know to call us?” he said again, each word a little more defined, an edge of stress, maybe even anger in his voice.
   “I called you because I’ve got a package sitting on my desk that was mailed from Las Vegas.”
   “What kind of package?” he asked.
   Was it time to tell the whole story? I hadn’t earlier because once you tell someone certain things—say, you got mailed a human head in a box—they tend to think you’re crazy. I was in the media enough for someone to pretend to be me, so I’d wanted them to take me seriously before they discounted me as some crackpot psychotic.
   “Someone mailed me a human head. The return address is your city.”
   He was quiet for almost a minute. I could hear his raspy breathing. I was betting on the smoking. About the time I was going to prompt him, he said, “Can you describe the head?”
   He could have said a lot of things, but that wasn’t on my list. Too calm, even for a cop, and too practical. The moment he asked me to describe it, I knew he had someone in mind, someone who was missing a head. Shit.
   “The head is in plastic, packed in ice. The hair looks dark, but that could be partially from the way it was packed. The hair looks straight, but again, I can’t be sure that it’s not some leakage making the
 hair appear straight. Caucasian, I’m sure of, and the eyes look pale. Gray, maybe pale blue, though death can steal color from the eyes. I have no way of telling time of death, so I don’t know how much discoloration could have taken place.”
   “Have you searched the box for anything else?”
   “Is your man missing more than just a head?” I asked.
   “A badge, and a finger. The finger should have a wedding band on it.”
   “I’m sorry to hear that last part.”
   “Why?”
   “Telling the wife, I don’t envy you that.”
   “You have to do that yourself much?”
   “I’ve seen the grieving families of the vampire vics often enough. It always sucks.”
   “Yeah, it always sucks,” he said.
   “I’m waiting for forensics to look at it before I touch anything. If there are any clues, I don’t want to fuck them up because I got impatient.”
   “Let me know what they find.”
   “Will do.” I waited for him to add something, but he didn’t. All I had was his breathing, too rough, too labored. I wondered when was the last time he’d had a physical.
   I finally said, “What happened in Vegas, Sheriff Shaw? Why do I have a piece of one of your officers on my desk?”
   “We aren’t sure that’s who it is.”
   “No, but it would be an awfully big coincidence if you’ve got an officer who’s missing a head, and I’ve got a head in a box sent from your town that superficially matches your downed officer. I just don’t buy a coincidence that big, Sheriff.”
   He sighed, then coughed; it was a thick cough. Maybe he was just getting over something. “Me either, Blake, me either. I’ll go you one better. We’re holding back the fact that we’ve got a missing head and badge. We’re also holding back from the media that there’s a message on the wall where my men were slaughtered. It’s written in their blood, and it’s addressed to you.”
   

Cerulean Sins
Strange Candy
Serpentine
Swallowing Darkness
Guilty Pleasures
A Caress of Twilight
Affliction
Dead Ice
Mistrals Kiss
Dancing
Seduced by Moonlight
Jason
The Harlequin
Burnt Offerings
Blue Moon
A Kiss of Shadows
Narcissus in Chains
Obsidian Butterfly
Danse Macabre
The Laughing Corpse
Never After
Incubus Dreams
Skin Trade
Circus of the Damned
A Stroke of Midnight
Laurell K. Hamilton's Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter
Hit List
Micah
Divine Misdemeanors
Bloody Bones
Flirt
Wounded
The Lunatic Cafe
A Shiver of Light
Kiss the Dead
Nightseer
Bullet
The Killing Dance
A Lick of Frost
Blood Noir
Shutdown
Beauty
Nightshade
Cravings
Crimson Death
Bite
Sucker Punch
Rafael
Fantastic Hope
A Terrible Fall of Angels
Anita Blake 4 - Lunatic Cafe
Obsidian Butterfly ab-9
A Kiss of Shadows mg-1
Seduced by Moonlight mg-3
The Scoundrel
Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter collection 11-15
Mistral's Kiss mg-5
Incubus Dreams ab-12
Affliction ab-22
[Anita Blake 17] - Skin Trade
[Anita Blake 18] - Flirt
Flirt ab-18
A Caress of Twilight mg-2
Danse Macabre ab-14
Cerulean Sins ab-11
[Merry Gentry 05] - Mistral's Kiss
Death of a Darklord
ABVH 01 - Guilty Pleasures
Bullet ab-19
Anita Blake 12 - Incubus Dreams
Curcus of the Damned
Dancing (anita blake)
[Anita Blake 15] - The Harlequin
Meredith Gentry 01 - A Kiss of Shadows
Death of a Darklord (ravenloft)
A Lick of Frost mg-6
The Harlequin ab-15
[Merry Gentry 04] - A Stroke of Midnight
Anita Blake 11 - Cerulean Sins
The Girl Who was Infatuated with Death
Micah ab-13
Meredith Gentry 6 - A Lick of Frost
16 Blood Noir ab-16
Divine Misdemeanors_A Novel
Hit List ab-20
[Anita Blake Collection] - Strange Candy
Ardeur: 14 Writers on the Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter Series
Anita Blake 8 - Blue Moon
Swallowing Darkness_A Novel