Cherry Bomb: A Siobhan Quinn Novel

Read Cherry Bomb: A Siobhan Quinn Novel for Free Online

Book: Read Cherry Bomb: A Siobhan Quinn Novel for Free Online
Authors: Caitlin R. Kiernan, Kathleen Tierney
never would learn the answer to that one.
    “And don’t you
ever
fucking again call me Siobhan.”
    “Okay, Quinn. I’ll try to remember that.”
    Jesus, she looked smug. Right then, I hated her as much as I’d ever hated anyone, which is saying a lot. It passed quickly, but for a moment that hatred was almost enough to call the Beast back again.
    “Now,” she said. “Are we done playing chicken? Can we put our dicks away and—”
    “You gonna tell me what’s going on with this Snow guy?”
    “You know, you look a little woozy, Quinn. Maybe you ought to sit down.” She nodded at the love seat, which was nearer the window than the sofa was. I sat down.
    “Who is he?” I asked again.
    “Just a disgruntled asshole client. This isn’t the first time I’ve had to deal with his goons. He gets pushy when I’m late with a delivery.”
    I covered my eyes a moment. The contacts were stinging, and the room seemed a lot brighter than it had only five minutes earlier.
    “And you’re worried maybe this time he’s gonna do more than send the goons around, even though having a goon of your own on your six isn’t
entirely
the reason I’m here. Have I got that right, Ms. Smithfield? More or less?”
    “More or less,” she said.
    I squinted at her from between my fingers. Her pale skin almost seemed to glow. She sat down on the sofa and reached for the pack of cigarettes and my Zippo lying on the cushion where I’d left them.
    “So what makes this time different?” I asked her.
    She exhaled smoke and tossed the lighter at me.
    “How about we discuss Isaac Snow later? I’m starving. You might only need to eat every couple of days, but right now I’d kill for pizza or a bowl of noodles. I’m not used to missing breakfast.”
    So we went to Famous Original Ray’s on Ninth, and I watched while Selwyn scarfed down three slices of meatball and sausage. At least she wasn’t a vegetarian. Other than my blood, the CPA
had
been, and I never missed an opportunity to point out the irony.
    I asked again about the troublesome client, and once again she dodged the questions.
    “Later,” she said.
    She sat there in her fraying gray cardigan and the same Hellboy shirt from the night before. I sat there in my duster and a black tank top. I had gone to the trouble to hide my true face, my true teeth, because, duh, vamps are a lot more noticeable by the light of day. There was a strange familiarity about that morning. Like, you know, we’d known each other for years. There never was a “getting to know you” period for me and Selwyn Throckmorton. Is that what people mean by soul mates? You meet someone, and the way it goes feels like you’ve known them all your life?
    Once upon a time, as they say, I’d thought that was a girl named Lily.
    Selwyn stopped gnawing the crunchy rind that was the only thing left of her third slice and dropped the piece of crust onto her grease-stained paper plate.
    “Ever think it might not have been an accident?” she asked me.
    “Ever think
what
might not have been an accident?”
    “The first ghoul, that night in the warehouse.” She wiped her hands with a paper napkin.
    I wasn’t in the mood for stupid questions—but, then, who the hell ever is, right? I sighed and watched the plate-glass windows, all the people walking past. They looked like a buffet.
    “I was there,” I told her. “I didn’t do shit but scream and try to get out of its way. If the stupid, clumsy fucker had looked where it put its feet, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.”
    The first nasty I ever saw, and the first that ever died because of me. Note that I did not say “first I ever killed,” because I didn’t do jack shit but scream like the teenage girl I was and try to crawl away—
after
it had murdered Lily. Fuck. I never even learned her last name. She was just Lily, and me, I was just Quinn. We met out back of a They Might Be Giants show at Lupo’s, and after that night we were lovers, best

Similar Books

After the Last Dance

Manning Sarra

Ghost Town at Sundown

Mary Pope Osborne

See If I Care

Judi Curtin

Spoiled Rotten

Dayle Gaetz

Moving Can Be Murder

Susan Santangelo

Souvenir

James R. Benn