by J. R. Rain
He went on. “Her parents were dead instantly. I have no clue what she must have felt watching this animal attacking her parents, but it must have been horrible. Worse, she watched from the woods as he huddled over both bodies, drinking deeply from them. Sometimes he would look up, glance around, sniff the air, and then bury his face back into their torn necks.”
Roy shook his head some more, and I wondered idly what drugs the man was on. Probably one or two, although he didn’t seem high. Still, he seemed skittish as hell. Paranoia? Good old-fashioned weed? Or was he just scared of me?
He went on, “And what the man did next is really no surprise. She watched from the woods as he proceeded to drag her parents across a grassy area to their nearby car. He then used their lighter fluid to set fire to the car and the immediate area.
“Veronica had scrambled away, higher into the hills, in shock and horror, no doubt. She told me the last thing she saw was her parents’ bodies blackening in the burning car.”
Roy finished the cigarette and seemed to debate having another. Apparently, he decided against it. He went on, “In twenty minutes, this girl went from having a normal life with happy, loving parents, to watching their corpses burn into charcoal.”
He stopped talking and his words hung in the air. The room smelled now of cigarette smoke. It had smelled of something else, too. Something coppery. And if I had to guess, I would say the smell was blood. Old blood.
But that could have just been my imagination.
“Who else have you told this story to?” I asked.
“No one, you’re the first. Well, the first outside our group of friends.”
“I’m honored,” I said. “So how long did it take you to make up that bullshit?”
Roy’s eyebrows knitted together irritably, the uni-brow making its grand re-reappearance. “It’s the truth, man.”
“Fine. When did this happen?”
“Three years ago,” he said.
“I’m going to look this story up, Roy. Something like this would have made the news, and if I discover you’ve been lying to me, or have played any part in Veronica’s disappearance, I’m coming back for you.”
His eyes never wavered. “Look it up, man. Three years ago. Echo Park.”
“Fine. Where is she now?”
He looked down. Always a sign of deception.
“Tell me, motherfucker.”
“Look. I don’t know, okay? All I know was that she wasn’t...successful down here, and so she’s up north.”
“What the unholy fuck does that mean?”
Ron looked truly agonized. I knew this because his uni-brow was arched halfway up his forehead. “Look. She’s meeting with someone.”
I didn’t like his answer, mostly because I knew it was bullshit. I hit Roy hard with the back of my hand. It’s amazing how much kinetic energy you can generate with a simple backhand swing. Roy felt it. He stumbled backward and yelped.
“Jesus, what the fuck was that for?”
“What’s she doing up north?”
“Look, I don’t—”
I didn’t like the beginning of that answer, either, and my other hand shot out, low. It caught him in the gut and he doubled over. I grabbed the back of his hair and pulled him up to face me. His nose was trickling blood. He was gasping hard as if he had just run a marathon and it took all my willpower not to slap him again just because I hated his stupid eyebrow.
“Talk. No lies. Or this starts going very badly for you.”
He gasped, sucking wind. I could feel his heartbeat reverberating up through his hair.
“Look, she’s...she’s searching for the thing that killed her parents.” Suck, gasp. “He’s somewhere up north.”
“Who is he? What’s his name?”
“I don’t know. She never tells us anything. She only drops, you know, clues. Says it’s better that we don’t know anything.”
His words jived with Nicole’s. They also had the ring of truth. I always listen for the ring of truth. It’s there, if you know how to find it. I let him go, and he collapsed in a big velvet chair. He looked defeated and fucked up. Good.
“And how did you meet Veronica?” I asked.
He smiled weakly. “Anyone looking for vampires eventually ends up here,” he said, spreading his arms.
“Do you have any clue how fucking lame that sounds?”
“Do you have any clue what you’re talking about?” he countered, and wiped his bleeding mouth and stared down at the blood on his hand. The word longingly came to mind.
“And what do people do in here?” I asked, motioning to this back room.
Roy licked his hand.
“Anything they want, man.”
I stood, sickened.
“You’ll be seeing me,” I said, and left.
* * *
I was sitting in a Starbucks a few streets away.
Adrenalin was still pumping through me. I still felt a strong desire to kick someone’s ass. The name Roy popped into my mind. Maybe later.
I had no clue what was going on, and that was the frustrating part. I’ve been frustrated on cases before, trust me, but this one was taking the cake.
Seriously, what the fuck was going on?
Sipping on a latte of some sort and eating a scone of some sort, I waited while my laptop fired up. Starbucks was mostly empty. No surprise there since it was coming on to midnight. My hands were still shaking a little. Adrenalin does that to you. Sometimes it takes me a little while to come down from my ass-kicking high.
Finally online, I did a quick Google search and came up with nothing. I sensed a very thorough beating in Roy’s immediate future. If that weird, blood-sucking asshole lied to me....
A few tries later, after trying different keywords, I came upon the article I wanted. For now, Roy was spared.
The article was in the L.A. Times. There had, indeed, been a car fire in Echo Park, one that had burned nearly half the hillside. Two charred bodies had been found inside a Cadillac. No indication of foul play, and no mention of the daughter who had witnessed the attack. The article gave the couple’s names: Jeremy and Tonya Fortune.
I quickly accessed my various data mining websites, proprietary sites available only to licensed private investigators, and found them soon enough. Jeremy and Tonya Fortune out of Reseda, California. The valley. About an hour north of Los Angeles. It had to be them because all their personal information abruptly stopped three years ago. I even verified the Cadillac.
I dug deeper.
Jeremy and Tonya Fortune had one daughter. Valerie Fortune.
Valerie? Veronica?
It was her, I knew it. Why she had changed her name, I didn’t know. Just as I didn’t know why she had not come forward to report her parents’ murder.
Maybe she feared no one would believe her.
Believe what? That a vampire killed her parents? If so, then she was right. No one would have believed her.
I checked her date of birth, then did the math. Valerie—or Veronica—was indeed seventeen. Which put her at fourteen at the time of her parents’ death.
So what did I have here?
Two dead bodies, and a girl who witnessed something. What she witnessed, exactly, I didn’t know. But a car with her parents inside didn’t just go up in flames on its own.
I sat back and drummed my fingers on the table. Veronica’s story was credible. But it was hearsay. I needed to talk to the source.
I needed to find Veronica. Or Valerie.
I packed up my laptop, polished off the latte thingy, and decided to start fresh in the morning.
After all, I had had enough of vampires for one night.
Hell, for a lifetime.
The Vampire With the Dragon Tattoo
is available at:
Kindle * Kobo * Nook
About the Author:
J.R. Rain is an ex-private investigator who now writes full-time in the Pacific Northwest. He lives in a small house on a small island with his small
dog, Sadie, who has more energy than Robin Williams.
Please visit him at www.jrrain.com.
Add him on Facebook.
Add him on Twitter.
Return to the Table of Contents