Call of Night: The Thorne Hill Series Book Three

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Call of Night: The Thorne Hill Series Book Three Page 10

by Goodwin, Emily


  Pretty, blonde, and innocent-looking. But both Kristy and Eliza have powers you’d never suspect.

  “Have you turned anyone else into a cat lately?”

  “Not lately. Why, you have someone you want to be catified?”

  “Catified?”

  “Or any other animal. I can’t promise it’ll work, though.”

  She lets out a snort of laughter and tips her head, watching me. I’ve been in Chicago for three days, and the lack of communication from my coven is starting to really bother me, which is why Lucas suggested I get out of the house and go out tonight. He should be done with whatever he’s doing soon.

  “What about a vampire?” Eliza asks. “Do you think you could transfigure a vampire?”

  “I’m not sure,” I answer honestly. “Maybe? Though transfiguring them back would be much harder. You do have someone you want cursed, don’t you?”

  Her shoulders fall up and down in a shrug. “Not currently, but it’s always good to have options.”

  Two guys come over to the table, sipping whiskey out of Mason jars. “We couldn’t help but notice you were drinking alone,” the one with a beard says.

  “I know she’s easy to overlook, but I’m not alone,” Eliza retorts and draws her fangs. “And I don’t drink.”

  “I told you she was one,” the other guy says to beard-guy. “That’s so hot.”

  Eliza rolls her eyes. “It is, I know.”

  “Can I buy you a bottle of blood then?” non-beard guy asks. “Or offer you something a little fresher?”

  “No thanks, I already ate.” Eliza forces another smile. She’s acting annoyed, but I know she’s eating the attention up.

  “What about your friend?” beard-guy asks, looking at me. “Does she want a drink?”

  “She’s not my friend, she already has a drink, and trust me when I say she’s crazy.”

  “I like crazy,” beard-guy laughs and takes another sip of whiskey.

  “Not this kind of crazy.” Eliza tips her head and sniffs the air. “Speaking of crazy,” she huffs, and I follow her gaze to the front of the bar. The lighting is dim already, and the energy shifts, making almost everyone stop and stare at the two redheaded bombshells that just walked in.

  “Naomi and Nicole!” I exclaim, getting up so fast I almost trip over beard-guy. “What are you guys doing here?”

  “We came to see you, dummy,” Naomi says dryly. “And it’s our half-birthday. We’re going out tonight and taking you with.”

  “You celebrate your half-birthday?” Eliza looks Naomi up and down and then checks out Nicole. They’re twins but aren’t identical.

  “Why not?” Naomi sinks into a chair across from Eliza and grins. “I’ll take any excuse to celebrate how awesome I am.”

  Eliza holds her gaze for a second and then smiles back. “I like the way you think. Drinks on the house tonight. What do you want?”

  “Surprise me.” Naomi leans forward, raising her eyebrows. Eliza’s smile grows and she gets up, moving with vampire speed to the bar. Kristy comes in the bar a minute later, throwing her arms around me as soon as she gets to the table.

  “It’s only been like a week and I miss you.” She takes a seat next to me. “You two could have waited for me. Finding parking is a bitch around here, you know.”

  Naomi laughs. “We like to make an entrance.”

  “You like to make an entrance,” Nicole counters. “And I agree with Kristy. I’ve missed you too, Callie. It’s total bullshit you were suspended.”

  “Tabatha had to do something drastic. She’s been accused of favoring me before.”

  “Because she does,” everyone says at the same time and we all laugh.

  “Have you heard anything?” I run my finger down the water glass, wiping away a few more beads of condensation.

  “Nothing good,” Naomi says quickly. “But we’re not here to talk about that. We’re here to look hot, get drunk, and live our best lives tonight.”

  “I can get behind that,” I say.

  “Good. Because that’s what we’re doing.” Naomi looks over at the bar. “Who’s the hot blonde again? I was a little distracted trying not to be eaten by zombies the last time we met.”

  “That’s Eliza. She’s Lucas’s vampire daughter or whatever you’d consider her.”

  “Does she like to party?”

  “I don’t think she likes to have fun. At all.” I watch Eliza come back over to the table, carrying a tray of drinks with perfect grace, impressive for how fast she’s moving.

  “Now I just don’t believe that.” Naomi picks up her drink and licks sugar off the rim before taking a drink. “This is good. I say we pregame here and then find something a little more lively.”

  “Pregame?” Eliza sets the rest of the drinks down on the table.

  “It means drink before you go out drinking and is something college-aged people do, not us old people,” Kristy laughs.

  “I know what pregaming means,” Eliza snaps.

  “Told you she likes to have fun.” Naomi leans back and smiles. “It’s just too bad you can’t get drunk.”

  “Oh, I can.” Eliza puts her hands on the table, smiling in a way that shows off her fangs. She’s used to being able to scare humans this way, but won’t get the same reaction from me or my friends. “If the person I’m feeding from is drunk enough.”

  “Then come out with us. I’d love to see that.”

  “Really?” Nicole looks at her twin incredulously.

  “What?” Naomi innocently shrugs. “Tonight is about having fun and forgetting about the bullshit going on within our own coven. Though if I drink enough tonight you might be able to convince me to start our own.”

  “Ugh, witches and drama.” Eliza rolls her eyes again, which I’m realizing is a signature move for her. “But you know what, I’m bored. Watching you four get drunk and act like idiots is better than reality TV.”

  “Perfect,” Naomi says, picking up her drink. “Let’s get this party started.”

  * * *

  “I love this song!” Kristy loops her arm though mine. We’re two bars into bar hopping our way around Chicago, and if we keep drinking at the rate we are, we aren’t going to make it to very many more bars after this.

  Which is fine with me.

  I’m having fun with my friends, and the most shocking thing of all is that I think Eliza might be having fun too. She spent the first hour making snide comments, but she either stopped or maybe I’m just drunk enough now not to notice.

  “Dance with me!” I suck down the rest of my drink, not wanting to leave it unattended, and get off the leather couch I was sitting on. We’re at some swanky bar that is bordering on a nightclub downtown. This place is hard to get into, and we might have used magic to put our names on the guest list. The DJ here today is someone famous, but their name rang no bell for me.

  “That guy over there is totally eye-fucking you, Callie.” Nicole, who’s just as drunk as I am, wraps her arms around me and laughs. “Or maybe he’s eye-fucking me. Because I’m standing here now.”

  “Where?” I lean back, obviously looking in his direction.

  “No, don’t look now!” Nicole giggles.

  “Ohhh, he’s cute!”

  “You think so?”

  Kristy spins in a circle, looking around for the guy. “I do! If you don’t want him, I’ll take him.”

  “Go talk to him,” I say, not sure which friend I’m encouraging to go hit on the hot guy by the bar. “I need to pee.” I slip out of Nicole’s arms and weave my way through the crowd to find the bathroom. I’m happily drunk, aware that I’m just about at my limit of having too much if I keep drinking.

  I use the bathroom and then stop at the mirror to put on more lipstick.

  “I love your hair,” a very drunk girl tells me, wobbling her way out of the bathroom stall and over to the sink.

  “Thank you. Yours is really pretty too.”

  “Aww, you think so?” She looks at herself in
the mirror. “I can’t get it to hold a curl like yours, though. How’d you do it?”

  “Magic.”

  “I wish I could do magic!”

  “It is very handy.”

  “And your dress! Oh my god, you’re just so pretty.” The drunk girl cups her hands around her face, looking me up and down. I changed before we went out into a tight black dress and dark purple heels.

  “Thanks,” I tell her again and look at myself in the mirror. “It’s not very comfortable, though. Well, maybe it’s just the bra.” The pushup bra makes my boobs look ridiculously big, achieving the look I wanted perfectly.

  I pull my phone from my purse to take a mirror selfie to send to Lucas, because right now that seems like the best idea in the world. He’s either still at the bar or back at home, I’m not sure. But now that I’m thinking about him, I suddenly miss him. Specifically, his cock.

  Holding my phone in my hand in anticipation for Lucas’s reply to my text, I leave the bathroom and go out to find my friends. Naomi and Eliza have a group of men around them. Nicole and Kristy seemed to have given up talking to the hottie by the bar and are dancing together on the middle of the dance floor. I step to the side, letting a group of bachelorettes pass by me to get to the bathroom, and smile, looking at my friends again.

  I love them so fucking much.

  My heel catches on the floor and I drop my phone in an attempt to catch my balance.

  “Shit,” I mumble and drop to the ground to look for it. Someone walks by and kicks it under a table. Positive no one will notice, I hold out my hand and telekinetically bring it to me. Smiling triumphantly, I straighten back up. My phone dings with a text from Lucas.

  “Please be a dick pic,” I say out loud and then laugh. Right as I’m holding the phone up to my face to use the facial recognition to unlock it, something vibrates through the air. I lower the phone and whirl around.

  The last time I was drunk in a bar and felt the energy shift like this, a vampire was feeding off an unwilling human in the basement. This, though…this doesn’t feel like a vampire.

  It feels bigger, which doesn’t make sense. I’m drunk and confused. Yeah…that has to be it. I hold up my phone again and this time I get so far as unlocking it. Before I can read Lucas’s words, the same vibration echoes through the bar. I’m not paying attention to what I’m doing as I look around again, and somehow, I’ve accidentally called Lucas.

  “Oh, hey,” I say after hearing him call my name. “I didn’t mean to call you.”

  “I was hoping you were calling for phone sex.”

  I close my eyes and feel the world spin around me. “Hah, that kind of sounds nice. Though real sex would be better.”

  “Oh, it will be. Are you having fun?”

  “I think so.” I take a breath and open my eyes again, stepping back into the hall that leads to the bathroom. The hall keeps going, leading to a door with an emergency exit. The same vibrating energy pulses through the air, and I slowly start to walk toward the exit door.

  “You think?” Lucas laughs. “Maybe you need more to drink.”

  “There’s a vibration.”

  “Are you trying to be kinky?”

  “No, it’s like…it’s like that scene in Jurassic Park when they’re hiding in the car and the T-Rex is stomping. It makes the water in the cup ripple. Do you know what I’m talking about?”

  “Yeah, I do, but I’m not following.”

  “I’m not really following either.” I stop walking and lean against the wall. “Are you still at work?”

  “Yes.”

  “Loser.”

  Lucas laughs again. “Go have fun with your friends, and don’t worry about vibrating until you get back into bed with me.”

  “Sounds good to me.” I end the call, put the phone in my purse and head back to the dance floor. I’m in the middle of a sea of people when I get that same weird feeling, but this time it’s paired with another feeling, one I’m all too familiar with.

  It sinks heavy in my stomach and makes my nerves tingle.

  Shit. I know this feeling well and know it’s usually not wrong. Because when I feel like something bad is going to happen, it always does.

  Chapter 11

  Get it together.

  Tonight is all about having fun with my friends. No stress. No worry. No following creepy feelings that are probably the result of too many vodka tonics. I hold my arms out to my sides and shake my hands, ridding myself of the access energy that’s making me feel all jittery.

  I go back out to the main area of the bar, and Kristy pulls me onto the dance floor. Twenty minutes later, I’m hot and sweaty and still haven’t shaken the feeling that something is lurking around the corner, waiting to attack.

  There’s a little hole-in-the-wall restaurant across the street from the bar that’s open late, no doubt making a killing from all the drunk people who walk over night after night. I get a hotdog—Chicago style, of course—and a Coke simply for the caffeine. I sit on a bench along the street while I eat, watching people mill in and out of the bar.

  I take my time eating, enjoying the little reprieve away from all the people at the bar. When I’m finished, I ball up the hot dog wrapper, impressed I didn’t get any mustard on my dress. I throw away the wrapper and walk down to the corner to cross the street and go back inside. I’m sobering up little by little and will no doubt need to down a drink or two to catch up with my friends.

  It’s a little after midnight, and the line to get into the bar is longer now than it was when we got here about an hour ago. I already bespelled the bouncer and can easily walk right past everyone in line.

  “Hey,” some girl shouts, angry that I’m bypassing the line. I turn around to tell her to just come along with me and stop throwing a fit like a baby, but something else catches my attention.

  Light from the streetlamps above us illuminate the face of a man standing at the back of the line, and I swear his eyes glowed blue for the half-second our gazes met. It wasn’t quite as bright and brilliant as the blue-eyed man, but there was definitely something not human about that guy. A bit of shock crosses his face, like he’s surprised I looked his way.

  My breath leaves me, and I spin so fast I almost lose my balance in these stupid heels. I take off, running as fast as I can down the sidewalk.

  “Hey!” I call after the man, who’s briskly walking away from me. The streetlight above me starts to flicker, and I don’t think I’m the one doing it. I push through people waiting in line, trying to find the man with the maybe-glowing blue eyes. It sounds crazy even to me, but I’m not willing to chalk this up to having too much to drink or a trick of the light.

  I know what I felt, and now I know what I saw.

  The man, who’s tall with dark eyes and dark hair, moves into an alley alongside the bar. I take off, heels clicking and clacking. Loose gravel crunches under my feet, and the light dims as I move away from the building. The alley comes to a dead end between the surrounding buildings, with just enough room for a garbage truck to back up and empty the dumpster.

  The door leading to the bar is locked from the inside, and the doors and windows of the building butting up to it have been boarded up. Colorful graffiti covers the plywood and I stop, looking up and down the alley.

  “Hello?” I call out. There’s nowhere for that man to have gone. The hair on the back of my neck starts to prickle, and the bad feeling presses down on me even stronger than before. It’s hot outside, yet a chill goes through me. “Where the hell did you go?”

  I can hear the bass thumping from inside the bar. Bringing my arms close to my body, I inch forward, looking at the buildings. There has to be a way inside one of these. He can’t just disappear, and I know he came down here.

  The dumpster, which is so full it’s almost overflowing, stinks to high heaven, thanks to the heat no doubt. I cover my nose with my hair and walk around it, holding my right hand out in front of me just in case the guy is a crazy person in hiding, waiting to atta
ck me.

  But he’s not behind the dumpster.

  Gagging from the smell of thrown-away food left to fester in the summer heat, I hurry away from the dumpster, feeling even more confused. It’s dark back here, and I know I’m missing something. I look out at the street, making sure no one is watching, and conjure a string of blue magic to light the area.

  And that’s when I see it, a gray feather floating on the top of a puddle. I ball my fists, turning the string of magic into an energy ball, and toss it up into the air. It hovers above me like a lightbulb, shining down on the feather.

  I crouch down and pick it up. The moment my fingers make contact, something passes through me, something I can’t even begin to explain to myself because it makes no sense.

  The feather is familiar. Holding it in my hand is giving me a sense of peace, making me feel like everything is going to be all right.

  Dirty water drips from the tip, but I don’t care. I run my finger up the spine of the feather. If this were from a bird, the thing has to have wings that span at least six feet. I hold the feather up a little closer to the energy ball, needing to get a better look.

  It’s deep gray in color with flecks of iridescent silvers. Birds aren’t that color. Hell, nothing in nature is that color. It’s so beautiful, and I can’t stop staring.

  Loose gravel crunches under someone’s feet behind me. I put out the ball of energy, shove the feather in my purse, and turn around, holding out my hand to stop whoever is coming toward me. It’s a young guy, probably a few days shy of his twenty-first birthday, and is here with a fake ID, no doubt. He’s staggering, with shoulder-length brown hair hanging around his face.

  “Bar’s that way,” I tell him and point at the other end of the alley. “And if you came back here to take a piss, find another dark alley. This one is occupied.”

  The guy keeps staggering forward. How drunk is he?

  A cold finger reaches out and moves down my spine. My hand flies to the back of my neck, reaching for whoever touched me. I whip around, heels catching on the uneven ground. My ankle twists, and I throw out a hand to stop my fall. I hit the dumpster hard, sending a shock of pain up through my wrist.

 

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