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"Okay," Lash said without conviction.
"Okay," Tommy said. "Let's throw the truck. We can't start until morning anyway. We'll figure out a plan and get some weapons then."
Troy Lee held up a finger. "One thing. How do we find the vampire?"
Tommy said, "Okay, let's get to work."
Morning found the Animals in the Safeway parking lot, drinking beer and discussing the strategy for finding and disposing of a monster.
"So, as far as you know, drugs don't affect them?" Drew asked.
"I don't think so," Tommy said.
"Well, no wonder he's p.i.s.sed off," Drew said.
"What about guns?" Jeff asked. "I've got Simon's shotgun at my house."
Tommy thought for a moment before answering. "They can can be hurt; I mean, damaged. But Jody heals incredibly fast this guy might even be faster. Still, I'd rather have a twelve-gauge against him than nothing." be hurt; I mean, damaged. But Jody heals incredibly fast this guy might even be faster. Still, I'd rather have a twelve-gauge against him than nothing."
Barry said, "A stake through the heart always works in the movies."
Tommy nodded. "It might work. We could try it. If we get that far, we can cut him up, too."
"Spearguns," Barry said. "I've got three of them. A CO2 model and two that use elastics. They won't shoot far, but they might pin him down while we cut him up." model and two that use elastics. They won't shoot far, but they might pin him down while we cut him up."
"I've got a couple of short fighting swords," Troy Lee interjected. "Razor sharp."
"Good," Tommy said. "Bring 'em."
"I'll bring the Word," Glint said. He'd been shouting "Get thee behind me, Satan," all night, putting the Animals on edge.
"Why don't you just go home and pray," Lash said, giving Glint a push. "We need some action here." He turned from Glint and addressed the group. "Look, guys, spearguns and swords are great, but how do we find this guy? The cops have been looking for him for three months, and they obviously haven't had any luck. If he's really after Tommy, then the best thing we can do is ambush him at Tommy's apartment. And I'm not sure I want to face him when he's awake. Simon was my friend too, but he was also one of the quickest people I ever met and the vampire took him out like he was a baby. And the paper said that he was armed. I don't know..."
"He's right," Drew said. "We're f.u.c.ked. Anyone want to catch the ferry to Sausalito and terrorize some yuppie artists? I've got mushrooms."
"Shrooms! Shrooms! Shrooms!" the Animals chanted.
Suddenly there was a staccato clanging, like someone banging on a garbage-can lid with a stick, which is pretty much what it was. The Emperor, who had been silent all night, stepped into the circle. "Before your spines go to jelly, men, take heart. I've been thinking."
"Oh, no!" someone shouted.
"I think I have a way to find the fiend and dispose of him before sundown."
"Right," Drew said sarcastically. "How?"
The Emperor picked up b.u.mmer and held out the little dog as if he were displaying the Holy Grail. "Pound for pound, a better soldier never marched, and a better tracker never sniffed out a sewer rat. I've been so stupid."
"Beg your pardon, Your Majesty," Tommy said. "But what the f.u.c.k are you talking about?"
"Until last night I didn't know that the lovely young woman with whom you share your abode was a vampire. Yet every time we pa.s.sed your building b.u.mmer went into a frenzy. He's been the same each time we've encountered the fiend himself. I believe he has a special sensitivity for the smell of vampires."
They all stared at him, waiting.
"Gather your courage and your weapons, good fellows. We'll meet here in two hours and remove this evil from my city. And a little dog shall lead us."
The Animals looked at Tommy, who shrugged and nodded. They had a new leader now. "Two hours, guys," Tommy said. "The Emperor's in charge."
Cavuto watched the Animals disperse though his field gla.s.ses. He was sitting in the parking lot at Fort Mason, a hundred yards from the Safeway. He put down the binoculars and dialed Rivera's number on his cellular phone.
"Rivera."
"Anything happening there?" Cavuto asked.
"No, I don't think that anything will now that it's daylight. The lights stayed off after the kid left, but I could hear a vacuum cleaner running. The girl's up there but she didn't turn on the light."
"So she likes to clean in the dark."
"I think she can see in the dark."
"I don't want to talk about it," Cavuto said. "Anything else?"
"Not much. Some kids were dropping pebbles on me from the roof. The guys in the foundry below the kid's apartment are moving around now. A couple of b.u.ms are doing some close-order public urinating in the alley. What's happening there?"
"The kid worked all night, drank some beers with the crew; they just split up but the kid and the wacko are still here."
"Why don't you call in some relief?"
"I don't want this out of our hands until we know more. Stay by the phone."
"Anything from the coroner?"
"Yeah, just got off the phone with him. Ma.s.sive blood loss from the guy in the truck. None from the guy in the morgue. Heart attack. They still haven't found the girl's body."
"That's because she was cleaning house all night."
"Gotta go," Cavuto said.
Tommy and the Emperor were waiting in the parking lot when the Animals returned in Troy Lee's Toyota and began unloading equipment.
"Stop, stop, stop," Tommy said. "We can't run all over the City with spearguns and swords."
"And shotguns," Jeff said proudly, jacking a sh.e.l.l into the chamber of Simon's shotgun.
"Put that back in the car."
"No problem," Drew said, holding up a roll of Christmas wrap. "Dallas, November 22, 1963."
"What?" Tommy said.
"Lee Harvey Oswald walks into the book depository with a Venetian blind. Minutes later Jackie's scooping brains off the trunk of a Lincoln. Anybody asks, we're all giving Venetian blinds to our moms for Christmas."
"Oh," Tommy said. "Okay."
Clint climbed out of the Toyota wearing a choir robe, a half dozen crosses hung around his neck. He held a Baggie full of crackers in one hand, a squirt gun in the other. "I'm ready," he said to Tommy and the Emperor.
"Snacks," Tommy said, nodding to the Baggie. "Good thinking."
"The Heavenly Host," Clint said. He brandished the squirt gun. "Loaded with holy water."
"That stuff doesn't work, Clint."
"O ye of little faith," Clint said.
b.u.mmer and Lazarus had left the Emperor's side and were nosing up to Clint. "See, they know the power of the Spirit."
Just then b.u.mmer jumped and s.n.a.t.c.hed the Baggie, then took off around the corner of the store, followed closely by Lazarus, Clint, and the Emperor.
"Stop him," Clint shouted at an old man coming out of the store. "He's taken the body of Christ."
"Don't hurt him," the Emperor shouted. "He's the only hope for saving the City."
Tommy took off after them. As he pa.s.sed the bewildered old man, Tommy said, "Last week they were playing cards with Elvis.What can I say?"
The old man seemed to accept this and hurried off.
Tommy caught up with them behind the store, where the Emperor was holding b.u.mmer in one hand and fending off Clint with his wooden sword with the other, while Lazarus licked the last few crumbs out of the torn plastic bag.
"He ate the blessed Savior!" Clint wailed. "He ate the blessed Savior!"
Tommy caught Clint around the waist and pulled him away. "It's okay, Clint. b.u.mmer's a Christian."
Jeff rounded the corner, his size-fourteen Reeboks clomping like a quarter horse. He looked at the empty Baggie. "Oh, I get it. They freeze-dried him, right?"
Drew came around the corner, followed by Lash and Troy Lee.
"Do we have a partying platoon, or what?" Drew said.
Jeff said, "I never knew that they freeze-dried Jesus, did you?"
Lash checked his watch. "We've got less than six hours before it gets dark. Maybe we should get started."
Tommy released Clint and the Emperor lowered his sword.
"We need something to give b.u.mmer the scent," the Emperor said. "Something that the fiend has touched."
Tommy dug into his jeans pocket and pulled out one of the hundreds that Jody had given him. "I'm pretty sure that he touched this, but it's been a while."
The Emperor took the hundred and held it to b.u.mmer's nose. "It shouldn't matter. His senses are keen and his heart is righteous." To b.u.mmer he said, "This is the scent, little one. Find this scent."
He put b.u.mmer down and the little dog was off with a yap and a snort. The vampire hunters followed, losing sight of b.u.mmer as he rounded the store. When they came around to the front of the store, the manager was coming out, holding a snarling b.u.mmer in his arms.
"Flood, is this your dog?"
"He's his own man," the Emperor said.
"Well, he just ran in and blew snot all over the cash in register eight. You train him to find money?"
The Emperor looked down to the hundred-dollar bill in his hand, then at Tommy. "Perhaps we should find something else to put him on the scent."
"Where was the last place you saw the vampire?" Tommy asked.
The gate guard at the Saint Francis Yacht Club wasn't buying a word of it.
"Really," Tommy said. "We're here to decorate for the Christmas party." The Animals waved their gaily wrapped weapons to ill.u.s.trate the point. "And the Archbishop has come along to perform midnight ma.s.s." Tommy pointed to Clint, who grinned and winked through his thick gla.s.ses.
"Deus ex machina," Clint said, exhausting his Latin. "Shalom," he added for good measure.
The guard tapped his clipboard. "I'm sorry, gentlemen, I can't let you through without a members.h.i.+p or a guest pa.s.s."
The Emperor cleared his throat royally. "Good man, each moment you delay may be paid for with human suffering."
The guard thought that he might have just been threatened, hoped, in fact, that he had, so he could pull his gun, and was just letting his hand drop to his gun belt when the phone in the gate booth rang.
"Stay here," he instructed the vampire hunters. He answered the phone and nodded at it, then looked across Marina Boulevard to where a brown Dodge was parked. He hung up the phone and came out of the booth.
"Go on in," he said, obviously not happy about it. He pushed a b.u.t.ton, the gate rose, and the Animals went in, headed for the East Harbor. Two minutes later the brown Dodge pulled up and stopped by the gate. Cavuto rolled down the window and flashed his badge.
"Thanks," he said to the guard. "I'll keep an eye on them for you."
"No problem," said the guard. "You ever get to shoot anyone?"
"Not today." Cavuto said. He drove though the gate, staying just out of sight of the Animals.
At the end of the dock the Animals and the Emperor stared forlornly at the big white motor yacht moored a hundred yards out into the harbor. b.u.mmer was in the midst of a yapping fit.
"You see," said the Emperor, "he knows that the fiend is aboard."
"You're sure that's the boat that he came off of?"
"Most definitely. It chills my spine to think of it the mist forming into a monster."
"That's great," Tommy said, "but how do we get aboard?" He turned to Barry, who was applying sunscreen to his bald spot. "Can you swim it?"
"We could all swim it," Barry said. "But how do we keep the gun dry? I could go get my Zodiac and take us all out there, but it'll take a while."
"How long?"
"Maybe an hour."