Dead Beat
they don't have much more intellect than your average animal. You have to outthink them—or the necromancer who is giving them orders. You could also cut off the necromancer's control of them."
    "How?"
    "Kill their drum."
    "Uh, what?"
    I shook my head. "Sorry. A zombie… well, it isn't really a person with thoughts and feelings and such, but the corpse is used to being a person. To eating, breathing—and to a beating heart. That's how the necromancer controls them. He plays a beat or some kind of rhythmic music, and uses magic to substitute his beat for the zombie's heartbeat. He links himself to the beat, the beat to the zombie's heart, and when the necromancer gives a command, as far as the zombie is concerned it's coming from inside him and he wants to do it. That's how they can control them so completely."
    "That book," Butters said. "Grevane kept drumming it against his leg. And then outside, that huge bass woofer in that Cadillac."
    "Exactly. Make the beat stop or get the zombies out of earshot, and he loses control of them. But that's really dicey."
    "Why?"
    "Because it won't destroy the zombie. It just frees it from the necromancer's control. Anything could happen. It could just shut down, or it could start killing everyone it sees. Totally unpredictable. If I'd stopped him from drumming in the exam room, they might have killed us all. Or run off in different directions to hurt other people. We couldn't afford to take the chance."
    Butters nodded, absorbing this for a minute. Then he piped up with, "Grevane said you weren't a Warden. What is a Warden?"
    "Wardens are the White Council's version of cops," I said. "They enforce the Laws of Magic, bring criminals in for a trial, and then they chop off their heads. Sometimes they get enthusiastic and just skip to the chopping."
    "Well. That doesn't sound so bad."
    "In theory," I said. "But they're so paranoid that next to them, Joe McCarthy looks like a friendly puppy. They don't ask many questions, and they don't hesitate to make up their minds. If they think you've broken a law, you might as well have."
    "That's not fair," Butters said.
    "No. It isn't. I'm not real popular with the Wardens. I'm not sure they'd come out to help me if I asked them."
    "What about other wizards on the Council?"
    I sighed. "The White Council is already at the limits of its resources. Even if they weren't, the Council really, really likes to not get involved."
    He frowned. "Could the cops stop Grevane?"
    "No way," I said, "Not a chance in hell are any of them prepared to handle him. And if they tried, a whole lot of good people would die."
    Butters sputtered. "They'll just sit there and let people like Phil get killed?" he demanded, his voice outraged. "If regular people can't do it, and the Council won't get involved, who the hell is going to stop him?"
    "I am," I said.

Chapter Seven
    We went back to my apartment, and I wasted no time getting Butters inside and behind the protection of my wards. Mouse loomed up from little kitchen alcove and padded over to me, tail wagging.
    "Holy crap," Butters said. "You have a pony."
    "Heh," I said. Mouse sniffed at my hand and then walked over to snuffle around Butters's legs with a certain solemn ceremony. Then he sneezed and looked up at Butters, wagging his tail.
    "Can I pet him?" Butters said.
    "If you do, he won't leave you alone." I went into my room to pick up a few things from my closet, and when I came back out Butters was sitting on the hearth, poking the fire to life and feeding it fresh wood. Mouse sat nearby, watching with patient interest.
    "What breed is he?" Butters asked.
    "Half chow and half wooly mammoth. A wooly chammoth."
    Mouse's jaws opened in a doggy grin.
    "Wow. Some serious teeth there," Butters said. "He doesn't bite, does he?"
    "Only bad guys," I told him. I grabbed Mouse's lead and clipped it to his collar. "I'm going to take him outside for a bit. I'll bring him back in; then I want you to lock up and stay put."
    He

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