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The greater the power used, the more alive the zombiewill appear. You'll also get more of their personality, more of what they were like in life."
Again, I'd overexplained. What was the matter with me tonight? The moment I thought it, I knew, or thought I knew. The dead were whispering to me. Not in voices—the true dead have no voices—but in power. It should have taken energy from me to raise a zombie. They shouldn't have been offering power up to me, like some sort of gift. Power over the dead comes with a price, always. Nothing's free with the dead.
Micah touched my arm. It startled me. I looked at him, and he said softly, "Are you all right?"
I nodded.
"The judge is talking to you."
I turned back to the judge and apologized. "I'm sorry, your honor. Could you repeat what you just said?"
He frowned at me but said, "You seemed distracted just then, Marshal Blake."
"I'm sorry, your honor. I'm just thinking about the job ahead."
"Well, we'd like you to concentrate a little harder on this part of the proceedings before you rush ahead of us."
I sighed, swallowed a half dozen witty and unhelpful things, and settled for, "Fine, what did you say that I missed?"
Micah touched my arm again, as if my tone might have been a little less than polite. He was right. I was getting angry. That old tension in my shoulders and along my arms was settling in.
"What I said, Marshal, was I was under the impression that only a blood sacrifice would give you that much life in a zombie."
I thought better of the judge. He'd done some research, but not enough. "There's always blood involved in raising the dead, your honor."
"We understand that the FBI was requested to supply you with poultry," he said.
Any normal human being would have said, Is that what the chicken is for ? Court time is not the same as real time; it's sort of like football time. What should take five minutes will take thirty.
"Yes, that is why the chicken was requested." See, I could talk the long way 'round the mountain, too. If a question has a simple yes or no answer, then give that. Beyond yes or no questions, explain things. Don't add, don't embellish, but be thorough. Because you're going to have to talk one way or the other. I preferred to give complete answers in the beginning rather than have my explanations be made longer on cross-examination.
"How does the chicken help you with this protective circle?" he asked.
"You normally behead the chicken and use its blood, its life energy, to help put up a protective circle around the grave.
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