“Would it be so wrong?”
“I can’t answer that, but I know that if a woman gets pregnant by a vampire over a hundred years old, then you can have birth defects, things wrong with the baby. So I’d need to know to keep an eye on Justine, if anything happened.”
He nodded. “I could not leave her with child and me dead; it would ruin her.”
I didn’t bother explaining the change in morality, because it wasn’t ruining her morally I was worried about. It was more the thought of the baby being part zombie. I couldn’t even imagine what that would mean for the child, or Justine.
“Justine did mention there were ways to prevent such things.”
“There are, but they aren’t a hundred percent reliable.”
“Blunt for blunt, Ms. Blake; do you have . . . intimate relations with your vampire fiancé?”
I nodded. “I do.”
“Aren’t you afraid of the very thing that you fear for my lady?”
“Yeah, but we take precautions and so far, so good.”
“Then isn’t it a choice for Justine and myself?”
I rubbed my temples. I was getting a headache. “I don’t know, I just fucking don’t know.”
“There is no reason for such language from any woman,” he said, and he was genuinely outraged. It made me laugh; I couldn’t help it.
“I am sorry that I shocked you, and I will watch my language in the future, Mr. Warrington.”
“I truly do not see the humor in a woman, a lady, using such language.”
“I suppose you don’t, but . . . I will refrain from using that word in front of you again.”
“Or in front of Miss Justine.”
“Of course not in front of her,” I said, and managed to keep a straight face. I cussed like a sailor, but no need to tell the zombie that.
“I am asking you for time to be with the only woman I have ever loved.”
“You just met her tonight.”
“Have women ceased to believe in love at first sight?”
“I believe in lust at first sight, Mr. Warrington, but not love.”
“You are very cynical for a woman. I suppose it is being a law officer that has done it.”
“I was cynical before I put on a badge, but yeah, most police officers end up pretty cynical.”
“It is a sad state of affairs if a beautiful woman doesn’t believe in love at first sight.”
“You’re a romantic, Mr. Warrington.”
“Most gentlemen are, Ms. Blake; we just hide it better than the gentler sex.”
I wasn’t sure women had ever truly been the gentler sex—it depended on how you defined gentle—but I didn’t argue with him. I just wanted time to discuss the moral implications of Warrington and Justine with Manny before I said yes or no. It wasn’t the romantic in me; it was the fucking guilt. I’d raised him from the grave and Justine was in love with him. There was no Hippocratic oath for animators, but it seemed like I’d broken some rule somewhere. I just wasn’t sure what rule, or when it broke. It was just all so fucked up in ways that I’d never imagined. I called Manny over to me; Nicky and Domino trailed him and I didn’t tell them to stay back. Warrington went to hold hands with Justine while I tried to decide what was the lesser evil. Or hell, if it was evil at all.
29
“YOU CAN’T REALLY be thinking this is a good idea,” Domino said.
“I didn’t say it was a good idea.”
“Anita, you can’t let the nice white-bread girl have sex with a zombie,” Manny said.
“What does her ethnicity or lack thereof have to do with anything?” I asked.
“It’s not her ethnicity, Anita, it’s that she’s never had a bad thing happen to her.”
“You don’t know that, she could have a tragic past.”
“Look at her, Anita, she’s nearly thirty and still shiny.” All four of us turned and looked at Justine, like one of those movie takes where everyone looks and tries so hard not to look like they’re looking that it’s painful. She was gazing up at the zombie as if he were the most wonderful thing in the world, but that wasn’t it. Her brown hair was straight and untouched by chemicals, skirt not too short or too long. Her blouse was long-sleeved with a little frilly collar; her shoes were sensible pumps. But it wasn’t the clothes either. I’d known people who dressed like that who actually had had horribly tragic childhoods, or old romances that had needed police to save the day. I couldn’t put my finger on it, or list the reasons, but Manny was right.
Justine looked at us and said, “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” I said, and we all looked away at once, which wasn’t suspicious at all.
“See, white bread,” Manny said.
“I get it, she still has that new-car smell,” I said.
“Yes.”
“How do people get that old and be that . . .” Nicky groped for a word.
“Untouched,” I offered.
“Fresh,” Manny said.
“Innocent,” Domino said.
“Yeah, that.”
“I don’t know,” Domino and I said together.
“Dominga Salvador’s sister was like that,” Manny said.
“Was, as in past tense?”
He nodded.
“What happened to her?” Domino asked.
“She fell in love with a man she thought was the moon and stars. We all liked him, too.”