Like A Bad Movie
Still smiling, the vampire shook his head. “You should be careful where you go in this city, Liebchen. Monsters walk with human faces.”
I snorted. “You don’t say.” This was the first time since I was eight that I had faced a vampire without either backup or Tasey. Still, I wasn’t going to back down. I could so take a solitary vamp.
His hair was dark and curly, longer than most vamps wore it, giving him an almost artistic air. Well, minus the corpse he was rocking underneath the glamour. He put his hands in his pockets and shrugged. “There are things in this world you’re better off not knowing. Go home and leave the night its mysteries.”
“Wow, melodramatic much? You vampires always take yourselves so seriously.” His eyes bugged out in surprise. “Yeah, I know you’re a creature of the night. Bringer of death, sucker of blood, needer of tans, so on and so forth. And oddly enough, I’m still unimpressed.”
He narrowed his eyes. “How do you know what I am, child?”
What is it with paranormals and calling me “child?” I’d be seventeen in December. How about a nice “ma’am” or something? “I know because it’s my job. It’s also my job to tell you this whole troll-stalking thing you’ve been doing is over.”
He threw back his head and laughed. I felt like I’d walked into some cheesy vampire movie. Finally done with his little show of sinister confidence, he focused on my eyes. “You will take me back to the trolls.”
Vampire mind tricks are dependent on their glamour, and with my nice view straight to his white corpse eyes, he just looked silly. I let my face go blank and nodded slowly. “Yes. The trolls. Back. With me. Cannot form. Complete sentences.” I shook my head. “Yeah, so not happening.”
He considered me, annoyed and at a loss for what to do next. “I don’t kill humans.”
“Me neither! See, common ground already.”
“Then I suppose we should both be on our way.”
I put my hands on my hips. “No, we shouldn’t. I’m not going to let you murder any more troll kids.”
He sighed. “Then I’m afraid we’ll have to lose our common ground.” Flashing his fangs, he lunged forward. I drew my arm back and punched him full in the face.
“Ow!” we screamed in unison as he clutched his nose and I shook my poor, poor hand. Why didn’t anyone ever tell me punching faceshurts?
“You hit me!”
“You were trying to bite me!”
We glared at each other, his intensity somewhat diminished by the hand he still held to his nose. “So what now?” he asked, smooth voice muffled.
“I haven’t thought that far ahead yet.” I wasn’t going to let him go, but I had neither the weapons nor the inclination to kill him. After another tense minute, he crouched down on the porch stoop. With a heavy sigh I sat down next to him, wrapping my arms around my knees in a pathetic attempt to ward off the chill. It felt like the blisters on my feet had coupled off and started forming little blister families. Tonight sucked.
I turned to the vampire. “You don’t bite humans, huh?”
He leaned back, staring into the night. “Not for a long time now.”
“Why?” I knew a lot of vamps like Arianna who didn’t drink human blood—but they didn’t drink trolls’ blood, either. This was the first time I’d ever heard of paranormals being targeted by a bloodsucker.
“Because, Liebchen, I remember what it felt like to have a heartbeat, a pulse. I remember what it was like not to be a monster. I am content to watch humanity swirl around me, growing and aging and changing in ways that I never will.”
“Fair enough, but if you’re such a pacifist, why murder troll kiddos?”
He turned to me, the weariness he’d displayed while talking about humanity replaced by an almost palpable anger. “Because I am eternal, and blood calls to me. It calls to me everywhere I go, begging for me to take it, crippling me with thirst. What made me this way? What else in the world is untouched by time? These creatures, and others like them. If I am a monster, I will play my part. But I will prey on my fellow monsters, and someday I will find out how they corrupted human life to make vampires, and I will kill all of them.”
I shivered, and it had nothing to do with my wet clothes. When Viv was on her spree, at least she thought she was helping paranormals by setting them free. This vampire—he simply hated. I resisted the urge to scoot farther from him. “Why do you get to decide? It wasn’t like the troll kids chose to be here. It’s outside their control, like your, uh, change was. You’re punishing them for being what they are. How does that make sense?”
A smile colder than the dark night spread across his features. “I have had four hundred years to think this through. You’re very sweet, but when you’ve been a monster as long as I, ‘sense’ stops having any influence.”
I squirmed, my butt going to sleep against the concrete steps. What had I gotten myself into here? My communicator was still in my wet coat, which I’d stupidly abandoned on the riverbank. Maybe I could knock him senseless and find Hulking Teeth Gnasher and the other trolls. But they’d probably kill him. Didn’t he kind of deserve it, though? And did thinking that make me just as bad as him?
“I should have stayed home and studied,” I muttered.
He let out a low chuckle. “Indeed. It would appear we’re at an impasse. I will not stop, and you’re committed to stopping me, no?”
I shrugged. “It’s my job. Sort of.”
“I ought to let you in on a secret, then.”
“What’s that?”
He leaned toward me. “You don’t smell entirely human.”
That did it. Vamp guy was going down. How hard could it be to beat a corpse senseless? I stood up, balling my hands into fists. “Tell me something I don’t know.”
He stood, too, a cruel smile twisting the rotting, desiccated remains of his real face. “Something you don’t know? Very well. I’ve found that paranormal blood has added benefits over human blood.”
Before I could move, he reached out and grabbed my wrist. I tried to jerk it back, but couldn’t break his far-too-strong grasp.
Oh, bleep.
I Like the Night Life
I pulled against the vampire’s grip again; he didn’t budge. This wasn’t happening. This couldn’t be happening. Vampires weren’t strong!
Seeing my growing panic, he smiled. I wanted to kick his rotting teeth in, I was so sick of that smile.
“Not what you expected? I did warn you.”
I threw a wild punch with my left hand, only grazing his head. He pushed forward and tripped me on the porch stairs. I fell back hard, cracking my tailbone against the blunt corner of a step, and let out a sharp cry of pain. He put his hand over my mouth. His hand that close to my eyes made me dizzy, unable to focus on his glamour or his real body. Smooth skin, dead skin, smooth skin, dead skin—I swallowed against the nausea.
“Hush, now, we don’t want to draw any extra attention. I’ll make it quick, my little monster.” He shoved my head to the side to expose my neck.
Screaming my frustration, I bit down as hard as I could on his fingers. He jerked back and I gasped air, gagging at the thought of what I had just put in my mouth. I ducked to the side and stumbled out of his reach. As soon as I had my balance, I took off running, my breath ragged. I raced down the street, turning a corner as I looked behind me, and nearly ran into a wall. Swearing, I flipped around—too late. He already blocked the way out, leering confidently.
“You don’t want to do this,” I said, holding up my hands.
“I really do.”
“No! I—” The chill breeze pulsed through me, and the tingling in my hands grew stronger. I could feel the air swirling in tiny eddies around me, connected to it in a new way. Suddenly my tired and aching body felt light, insubstantial but powerful. And I could feel the vampire’s soul, too, in front of me. Calling me. I could even see it, the faintest glow around his heart.
I shut my eyes, fighting the u
rge to close the distance between us. “Please,” I whispered. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
He laughed. “Are you confused, Liebchen?”
My eyes snapped open. Something in his expression changed when he saw the look there, his predatory sneer replaced with fear. I clenched my hands into balls. Not again. Not unless I had to. Holding myself back took all my strength, and my voice came out low and aching. “You should run.”
I hoped he wouldn’t.
He frowned, then backed slowly out of the alley, never taking his dead white eyes off me. When he reached the street, a baseball bat swung out of the night and cracked into his skull.
Jarred out of my horrible desire, my view opened up. Jack grinned and smacked the bat into his hand. “Fancy a quick game?”
My gaze drifted to the vampire lying on the ground. He was helpless now. Completely helpless. Which meant there was no excuse to drain him anymore. I took a shuddering breath and tried to clear my head by focusing on Jack.
Jack! “Where have you been, you miserable little creep?”
He raised his eyebrows, a look of mock hurt on his face. “This is the thanks I get?”
“Give me that bat and I’ll show you how grateful I am, coward!”
“Hey-oh, let’s not be hasty. What good would it have done us if I had been snatched, too? Besides, I came back. Right on time, by the looks of it.” He smiled, but something in his eyes was intense, accusatory, almost as if he knew what I was about to—no, what I might have done. “But you had it under control, right?”
I yanked the bat from his hands. “Do you at least have anything useful? Ankle trackers? A spare communicator?”
He made an elaborate show of checking his tight, long-sleeved shirt for pockets, then shrugged. “They’re all in my coat.”
I looked down at Jack’s tailored wool coat. The coat I’d been wearing the entire time. I slipped my hand inside and, sure enough, in a hidden pocket near my heart, was a thin communicator and a single ankle tracker.
Figures.
“‘Be prepared,’ that’s my motto.” He smiled smugly at me. “That, and ‘Sleep whenever possible.’ Oh, and ‘If you don’t notice it’s gone, what’s the harm in me taking it?’”
“Call it in,” I said, weary beyond belief and wanting to be as far as possible from this vampire. I tossed the communicator to Jack and bent down, my fingers twitching as I attached the tracker. I wouldn’t look at the vampire’s heart. I wouldn’t touch him. I put my thumb on the tracker to activate it, but nothing happened.
“Looks like they don’t trust you with trackers. Wonder why?” Jack leaned down to take over.
Maybe their distrust had something to do with the fact that I’d freed Lend? Or that I was responsible for releasing nearly every werewolf they had? I probably wouldn’t trust me, either. I took several steps back and leaned against the wall, looking up into the cloudy night sky, trying anything to take my focus off the vampire.
Jack stood. “They’re on their way.” He tossed the communicator lazily into the air and caught it behind his back. “Where are the trolls?”
Ah, crap. The trolls. How was I going to lie my way out of this one? I wasn’t about to turn them over to IPCA. As far as I was concerned, they’d earned their lives here. This vile creature on the ground in front of me was the only threat that needed to be eliminated.
I opened my mouth to spin a story, when a door opened in the wall across from us and two men in black turtleneck sweaters stepped quickly through, their faerie escorts remaining anonymous in the dark. They looked in both directions before walking forward and kneeling down next to the body.
One addressed me, his yellow wolf eyes glowing beneath brown ones. Huh. Guess IPCA didn’t lose all their werewolves, after all. “The trolls?”
I grimaced in what I hoped was a regretful way. “Long gone. They were tracking the vampire, some sort of blood vengeance. Tribal thing. But when they found out I was with IPCA they cleared out rather than be caught. I was following them when I met the vamp.”
“They don’t have a base here? No humans have been taken?”
“Nope. Just passing through. They took me to an empty warehouse, where they were camped. No sign of any people at all.”
I could feel Jack’s eyes on me and deliberately avoided looking at him. I was going to sell this lie. The only one who could contradict me was the vampire. Maybe I should have drained him . . . But, no. Raquel would take my word over his.
The werewolf nodded, then helped his partner haul the vampire up by his armpits.
“Be careful. He’s really strong. Like, stronger than you.”
The werewolf eyed me dubiously.
“No, really. He kills—” I stopped, my stomach sinking with the realization of what that information could do if it were spread around. “I’d better talk to Raquel. Make sure he doesn’t wake up until you have him in Containment. An ankle tracker’s not gonna do it with this one.” They nodded, half carrying, half dragging him back through the door. I caught a glimpse of one of the faeries, but I didn’t recognize her. Just as well.
Sighing, I slid down the wall to sit on the ground and winced as pain stabbed through my lower back, radiating outward from my tailbone. A few painful shifts and I was comfortable, in a not-going-to-die-right-now-but-maybe-later sort of way. A movement at the end of the street caught my eye. Birgitta, invisible to anyone else’s eyes, nodded at me, then disappeared back into the shadows. At least I’d done something right today. Maybe. Probably.
“So.” Jack sat next to me. “A fossegrim, trolls, and a super vamp all in one night. I’ve changed my mind—you really do know how to have a good time.”
On the verge of tears, I leaned over until my head was resting on his shoulder. “You have no idea.” I couldn’t get the desire—the need—I had felt to drain the vampire out of my head. My empty stomach churned with guilt. But I hadn’t done anything. I wouldn’t have, either, even if Jack hadn’t saved the day. My fingers tingled, disagreeing with me, and I balled my hands into fists. No.
We were quiet for a while, Jack tense under my head, uncomfortable but nice enough not to move. I felt strangely close to him right then, like we were the only two sane ones in a world swirling with madness and murder. I could feel the threads from that world, threatening to pull me in, and I’d take whatever anchor I could get. Even if he was a blond nightmare.
I lifted my head to look at him. “How did you find me?”
“Just lucky.” The answer was smooth, but it felt like he blurted it out a little too easily. I narrowed my eyes, but he continued. “Why did you lie about the trolls?”
“I didn’t.” We sat there looking at each other, two seasoned liars, until I couldn’t take it anymore. “Jack?”
“Hmm?”
“Thanks.” My voice cracked a little. “If you hadn’t shown up . . .”
“If I hadn’t shown up, you would have been fine. No need to get sappy on me when I’ve decided you might be some decent fun after all. Now, you happen to be wearing my nicest coat. I’d like very much to get it back, so let’s take you home, shall we?”
I couldn’t argue with that.
Honestly a Liar
Raquel frowned at me over the top of her black coffee. “Just looking at your drink is giving me a cavity.”
“Good thing IPCA has excellent dental.” I smiled and used a candy cane to stir my double whipped cream hot chocolate. The coffee shop was small, with warm yellow walls and poofy chairs in dimly lit corners, the scattered patrons hunched over laptops typing out caffeine-fueled works of dubious genius. I had picked this place because they stocked Christmas flavors ridiculously early (in spite of the various spiders and bats hung in honor of Halloween), and because it was thirty minutes by bus outside my town, so there was little chance of running into someone I knew. I doubted any of my werewolf or vampire buddies would recognize Raquel, but I preferred to avoid finding out.
“This is nice.” She wiped at a spot on the table
, again, and glared at a couple making out in the corner opposite us. At least she’d agreed to meet me here. Mostly because I’d flat-out refused to go back to the Center to debrief about the mission.
Well, to lie about nearly everything, if you want to be technical.
We’d already gone over my story about the trolls passing through. I resisted the urge to ask if the vampire had said anything about them. If he had and I was caught, I’d know. I hated keeping secrets from Raquel, but some things called for it. Jack had mentioned the near drowning, so I fed her some nonsense about how the fossegrim hadn’t killed me because a stray current separated us and let me get out of the water. No reason to give her more to worry about. The uber-vamp was information overload enough for one visit.
I shivered at the memory of his grip on my wrist and what I had wanted to do to him. “You’re not letting him out of Containment, right?”
“Of course not. He’s far too unstable for even the most basic assignment. But you were right not to tell anyone else why he’s so strong. It’s a disturbing development. I’ve never come across a vampire who targeted paranormals, and the fact that it helps him overcome natural vampire weaknesses—well, it’s best kept strictly under wraps.” She heaved a things are never simple, are they? sigh.
“Good. Guy’s a psychopath, even by vampire standards. And that’s saying something.” I leaned back, trying to find a position that didn’t hurt my bruised tailbone. I’d have to figure out how to hide it from Lend when he came tonight.
No. No more hiding.
“Hey, what about the elementals? Do you think maybe the vampire—” I felt slightly ill, worrying about a repeat of Viv’s spree. I didn’t think I could handle more paranormal deaths that I had to figure out.
Raquel shook her head. “No, I don’t think it’s related. There haven’t been any deaths or bodies. Nearly every elemental we’ve identified and have contact with has disappeared, but elementals are unusual—you understand. We’ve only been keeping track of them for a couple of decades now, so for all we know, this is common behavior.”
Supernaturally (Paranormalcy) Page 12