Chapter One
Raising the Dead
for Fun and Profit
Nowadays, anyone with a wallet full of cash and a
little insider knowledge is getting into the Supernatural
life. And, I do mean anyone. Criminals, politicians, even—
brace yourself—entertainers are plopping down tons of cash
for immortality.
—Supernatural Seattle ( June 2008)
Gil brought lawn chairs to the cemetery—not stylish Adirondacks,
not even semi-comfortable camp chairs (the ones with those handy
little cup holders). No. He dug up some cheap plastic folding
chairs, the kind that burrow into your leg flesh like leeches.1 He
arranged them in a perfect semicircle around a freshly sodded
grave, planted an iBoom stereo in the soft earth, pulled out a
bottle of ’07 Rose McGowan,2 and drained half of it before his
ass hit plastic. Granted, he managed these mundane tasks in a
pricey Gucci tuxedo, the tie loose and dangling. On any other
day, this would have been his sexy vamp look, but tonight . . .
not so much. His eyelids sagged. His shoulders drooped. He
looked exhausted.
I, on the other hand, looked stunning.
One of those movie moons, fat and bloated as a late-night
salt binge, striped the graveyard with tree branch shadows, and
spotlit your favorite zombie heroine reclining starlet-like on the
polished marble of the new tombstone—there was no way I was
subjecting vintage Galliano to the inquisition of plastic lawn
chairs; the creases would be unmanageable.
Wendy didn’t take issue with the cheap and potentially damaging
seating. She wore a tight pink cashmere cardigan over a
high-waisted chestnut skirt that hit her well above the knee. She
crossed her legs and popped her ankle like a 1950s housewife,
each swivel bringing attention to her gorgeous peek-toe stilettos—
certainly not the most practical shoe for late-night graveyard
roaming, but who am I to judge?3
The dearly departed were our only other company; about
twenty or so ghosts circled the grave—in a rainbow of moody
colors and sizes. A little boy spirit, dressed in his Sunday best and
an aqua green aura, raced by, leaving a trail of crackling green
sparks; the other, older specters muttered to each other, snickered
and pointed. Popular opinion aside, zombies do not typically
hang out in graveyards—ask the ghosts. We don’t crawl out
of the ground all rotty and tongue-tied, either. We’re created
through bite or breath, Wendy and I from the latter. So you
won’t see us shambling around like a couple of morons, unless
there’s a shoe sale at Barney’s.
“You’re killin’ me with The Carpenters, can’t you skip this
one?” I stretched for the iPod with my heel trying to manipulate
its doughnut dial. Karen was bleating on about lost love from
beyond the grave—and just a little to the left. “She’s forcing me
to search my bag for a suicide implement. I swear I’ll do it.”
“No shit. Her warble is drawing the less-than-present out of
the woodwork.” Wendy looked over the top of huge Chanel
sunglasses—she seemed to wear them as a joke, so I refused to
comment. She’d be more irritated with every second that passed.
Such a simple pleasure, but those are often the best, don’t you
find?
“Bitches.” Gil opened an eye. “This is a classic. Besides,
Markham put this playlist together.”
“Who’s that?” I’d decided against self-harm and opted for a
smart cocktail. I pulled a mini shaker from my bag and followed
that up with miniature bottles of vodka, gin, and rum. Who says
Suicides are just for kids?
I mixed while Gil chattered.
“Him.” He jabbed a
thumb toward the grave.
“That’s Richard Markham; they call him the Beaver King. He’s a millionaire, entrepreneur, and genuinely bad guy.
He owns a chain of strip
heard of them. Bottoms.”
When neither of us registered a hint of recollection, he became
animated.
“You know. He’s
been in the news recently
because of some shady business deals. He also coined the
phrase ‘All Bottomless Entertainment’.”
“Don’t you mean ‘all nude’?” Wendy asked.
“No. ‘All Bottomless.’ He’s decidedly anti-boobs. His clubs
feature blouses and beaver. It’s a very specialized niche.”
“Well then, this should be fun.” I stuck a straw into the shaker
and sucked.
It was nice to see Gil’s enthusiasm; he had been a complete
ass-pipe since he’d opened Luxury Resurrections Ltd., stressing
about every little detail. I had to hand it to the guy. After the
money dried up—his sire left him a hefty sum in their bank account
and then left (said Gil was too needy)—he launched his
plan to charge humans for vamping. He was one of the first in
Seattle, but the copycats were close on his heels. A few months
later he bought into my condominium—not a penthouse like
mine, but a pretty swank pad, nonetheless.
“Explain to me again why we’re out here?” Wendy struggled
to separate her legs from the sweaty straps—I cringed, afraid
that she’d leave some meat on the plastic; we were fresh out of
skin patch—they finally released with a slow sucking sound. She
massaged the pattern of dents on the backs of her legs. “It’s not
like vampires need to rise from the actual grave. It’s a little melodramatic.
Don’t ya think?”
“Yeah.” I drained the final droplets from the shaker with
loud staccato slurps. The alcohol seeped into my veins, flooding
them with welcome warmth.
“I told you, I have to provide an experience with the
Platinum package,” Gil huffed, then snatched up his man bag
and dug through it. He pulled out some Chapstick, spread it on
in a wide “O,” retrieved a crumpled brochure, and tossed it at
me.“ Here. Service is the only thing that’s going to set my business
apart from the chain vampire manufacturers. I provide individualized
boutique-like vamping, at reasonable prices.”
“Mmm hmm.” I slid from the headstone, carefully hop-
scotched across the grave—I’d hate to misstep and harpoon Gil’s
client, or worse, break off a heel in the dirt—and stood next to
Wendy. I smoothed the crinkled paper and turned to catch the
moonlight.
“The Platinum Package,” I read aloud. “Includes pre-death
luxury accommodations at the Hyatt Regency, voted by readers
of Supernatural Seattle as the best undead-friendly hotel in the
city, a thorough consultation with a vamping specialist, a fully realized death scenario, including funeral and interment, bereavement
counseling for immediate family, and an exclusive
orientation to the afterlife from the moment of rising. Hmm.”
“I spent a lot of time on that.” Gil beamed.
“Yeah, at least fifteen minutes.” My eyes found a series of
numbers after the description, that if it weren’t for the dollar sign,
I’d have mistaken for binary code. “Can I ask you a question?”
“Sure.”
“Is this the price down here?” I pointed out the figure.
“Yep.”
Wendy took a slug from a crystal-studded flask—she couldn’t
find her usual Hello Kitty one.4 Immediately, her skin took on
the rosy glow of most living alcoholics. I love the look: almost
human.
“One million dollars, Gil? You call that reasonable pricing?”
Wendy did a spit take that flecked the brochure and my
hands. “Jesus! So, if that’s the platinum, what’s the bronze package,
then?” Wendy asked, wiping at the Grey Goose trickling
from her nose. “A drive-by vamping?”
“Cute.” Gil tongued and sucked at his fangs in irritation.
He shrugged off our outrage and plopped down in his own
lawn chair. “Five hundred grand is the going rate nowadays, the
markup is for my fabulous luxury features. It’s not cheap, but
look what you get . . .” He swept his hands from his head to toes
like a game show hostess.“. . . a super hot greeting party. And . . .
a couple of hot go-go dancers.”
“Where?” I looked around. “Are they late?”
“Why, you two pork chops, of course. You remembered to
leave the panties at home, right?”
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