by Brandon Hill
“Is there something you wish to tell me?” I asked, prompting her. She alighted from the dresser, and I knelt down to her level. “You know you can tell me anything.”
“You’re only this quiet when you are upset,” Elisa said. “Did you take her blood without asking?”
I could not help the look of pain that mush have flashed across my face. Even though none of my children could, Elisa did not even need to read my thoughts. She was just that perceptive.
“I did,” I admitted after quite some time of silence.
“Oh, Father…” Elisa’s tiny voice lilted downwards with disappointment, and the sting of my shame grew deeper.
“Please,” I said, nearly hissing the word in my annoyance. “Could you not make things worse than I already feel?”
“Father, you have more control than that,” she said, making no attempt to hide the disbelief from her voice. “Far more, in fact. How did it happen?”
I said nothing, for she already knew the only way that it could have even been possible.
“You were drunk,” she said flatly.
“Yes,” I admitted, and could not help but look away from my daughter’s accusatory expression.
“But…even when that happens, we can resist the scent of blood. And you had already had a good meal before. You could have just charmed her. What happened?”
“I wish I knew,” I said hoarsely. Damn her insight.
“Father, the only way that could have been is if she was—”
I stopped her right there, speaking more forcefully than I had wanted. “No. Not her.”
“You don’t believe that,” she said softly.
For a long time, my rampant emotions stole away my words, and I could only be thankful that none of my children could read my mind as I could read theirs, or they could read one another’s. My eyes were tightly shut, and my face was drawn and tense. I think I was trembling with the strain of it all, combined with my roiling thoughts when I felt my daughter’s slender arms encircle my neck.
She was dismayed, and a little disappointed, but there was no accusation or judgment in her heart. I sighed, and felt the tension release, and the tears run down my cheeks as I relaxed and held her to me.
“I wanted her…” I whispered, “…and I hurt her. And now, I don’t know what to do.”
Our embrace lasted for a moment more, and then Elisa released me. I felt a handkerchief wiping the tears away, guided by her tiny hand.
“I’ve never known the pull of a potential consummate host,” Elisa said, “but even I know that what you did is not unheard of.”
“It doesn’t make it any better,” I said.
“I know,” Elisa replied, “and she may hate you for it.”
“I know.”
“Perhaps you should alter her memory?”
“It’s too late for that.” I shook my head. “Too much has happened. I’d never be able to erase it all. The memory of the drink, the first one, especially, is very difficult to remove.”
“I doubt you would give her up if you could,” Elisa said. “We’ve both seen what happens when our kind is taken the way you’ve been.” Earnestly, she looked me in the eye. “Would you give her up?”
I opened my mouth to protest, but found myself unable to speak against the wisdom of her words. The memory of that first drink, entrancing, bewitching, and beyond the sweetness of any feeding before overtook me, and I shivered inside.
I looked away from my daughter’s face, forever frozen in its youthful roundness, but heart-shaped with its pointed chin, and surrounded by brown curls. I was humbled, and even more afraid than before at the implication of her words.
“No.” I whispered it almost subvocally, but knew that she could still hear it.
“Then it seems you know already what you need to do.”
“Will you help her?” I asked.
Elisa smiled. “Of course I will, Father.” She kissed my cheek.
Chapter Two
My guest awoke as I received the large food tray from two of my children, who had brought it to my chambers. Elisa was with me, seated atop the night stand on one side of the bed, I on the couch upon the other side as the tray was set upon the table beside the bed.
My insides knotted as I saw her stir, moaning as her eyes fluttered. She smiled, wide and drunken, as her thoughts stirred to wakefulness, still high from my drink. She laughed low and soft, her voice coming out dissonant and breathy.
“Oh, Gary…I had the weirdest dream. I dreamed a vampire tackled me and then drank my blood…but it didn’t hurt at all! It kinda felt like that thing you did to me the other night. Y’know, with the Vaseline and the rotating…”
Her words slurred into incomprehension, and then faded into soft whispers as she turned her head to the side…thankfully, Elisa’s side. My daughter had been reading a book—her copy of Alice in Wonderland, which she had preserved excellently since I had first bought it for her nigh on a century ago.
Her thoughts were weak and sluggish, as I expected they would be after being fed from for the first time. I saw Elisa smile at her, and I felt the woman smile back. Elisa closed the book and scooted off of the nightstand, landing softly upon the carpeted floor. She placed the book carefully atop its surface.
“How do you feel?” she said to the woman. “We’ve been wondering when you’d come to.”
“I feel really strange,” the woman replied, her voice still low and slightly hoarse. “It’s like my body weighs a ton. I can barely move.”
“That’s only temporary,” Elisa assured her. “Your strength will come back soon enough. It’ll help if you eat something. Are you hungry?”
Elisa’s manner was always overtly friendly, especially with people whom she was acquainting herself. Perhaps this was due to her appearance of young age, but it was nevertheless one of her more endearing traits.
All that came to an end, however, when I detected a realization in the woman’s thoughts. She had not even turned her head towards me yet, but immediately, she realized that something was wrong. I felt her concentration rest upon Elisa’s eyes: catlike slits for pupils, surrounded by red irises like all those of our kind, which she had not bothered to disguise as usual. I did not know if she had done this on purpose, and had no time to ask, as she rounded the bed to the table where the tray of food lay.
“We brought food for you,” Elisa said, and reached for the cover atop the tray. “Because of how weak you are, I may have to feed you. I hope you don’t—”
“Wait a minute. What are you?” the woman said. I felt her suspicions rise like weeds in her mind. Elisa’s thoughts, however, remained as placid as the surface of a lake on a clear, windless day.
“Something’s not right about you. You look like a kid, but you don’t talk like one. And what’s with the eyes? They…”
I saw her stiffen, heard her breathing become shuddering and rapid. Elisa frowned, and placed the lid back upon the food tray.
“You…” the woman said. She still was not looking my way, and I sat perfectly still, not wishing to register myself in her peripheral vision. “You’re...”
“No,” Elisa said with a vague, but nevertheless revealing shake of her head. “It wasn’t me.” I then noticed her eyes move towards me indicatively.
I steeled myself, and met the woman’s gaze with my own. I saw myself through her thoughts; the wreath of raw fear that encircled my image through her mind’s eye nearly forced me out, reeling, but I held her gaze, my own expression passive, while fear boiled over into terror within the woman’s mind, and finally, blessedly, overwhelmed her. Her gray eyes rolled back, and she went limp in the bed.
“That could have gone better,” I managed to say after an uncomfortable few seconds. I then went to place the woman in a more dignified and comfortable position for when she would wake up.
“It’s not surprising,” Elisa remarked, and I agreed. “There is something you can do about it, though.”
I scowled at her unvoiced
suggestion. I had considered the idea before, but later dismissed it. “I took her blood without asking,” I said. “She doesn’t need more manipulation.”
“She will hate and fear you, most likely, if you don’t,” Elisa said. “Even I can’t stop that. At least she will have a moment to listen to reason, and then she’ll see when you release her, that you only did what was necessary to calm her down for a moment.”
“And if she refuses?” I asked.
“Then she refuses,” Elisa said. “Even some humans have rejected us. God knows they’ve rejected me.” I felt her resentment, and could not blame her. Even humans who were raised among our kind found Elisa’s appearance more than a little off-putting. “Father, you know as well as I do that sometimes, it doesn’t work out.”
I had no need for her to remind me. In truth, that was what I was most afraid of. The pull of a potential consummate host was so incredibly powerful that if the human who was the source of the attraction rejected the vampire, it was not unheard of for that vampire to pine and waste away to a feral state for lack of blood.
My poor daughter; her dismissal was easy for her to say; she did not know what it was like. Even now, her blood threatened to wrench my humanity away. I wanted nothing more than to taste her again, just for a moment…just once.
Grasping hard to my resolve, I shook myself free of that avenue of thought. “Very well,” I said, “I’ll do it. But I already hate myself for it.”
* * * *
I sent Elisa away before I finished the deed. It was difficult to do, and shameful, and I did not wish for her to see this part of me. I instructed her to let no one near the room until I gave the okay. If the worst were to happen, I would simply make the woman sleep again, and alter her memory to the best of my ability, as Justin suggested.
My daughter bore me no ill will, and obeyed with a last kiss on my cheek. Once finished, I sat to write in my journal, waiting for my guest to awaken. At last, she did.
“That…wasn’t a dream, was it?” she asked, her voice much clearer, and less groggy.
“No,” I replied, swallowing against the thirst that rose in me anew, despite my having over-indulged on her blood not but an hour before. Her rose perfume and intoxicating scent again greeted my senses. The memory of her blood’s sweetness nearly caused me to bite my tongue.
Her beauty was delicate, subtle, something that most men would overlook, like a librarian that either inadvertently or purposefully tried to subdue her attractiveness with unflattering clothes, but brought out her inner beauty through grace and eloquence.
“I’m in a strange room.” Her tone was almost calculatingly casual as she seemed to narrate her thoughts aloud. I held back my disgust at the sterile detachment in her mind that my meddling had produced “I feel like I got chased down by a dump truck, and then hit by one…And there is someone with skin that is white as paper and red cat eyes sitting right beside me, saying that it all wasn’t a dream.”
I waited.
“I know you,” the woman said, her expression brightening with understanding, her voice still soft, calm, and even. “I was terrified when I first saw you. You jumped me; you sucked down my blood. But…”
Her voice trailed off as she gazed at her hands, marveling at their steadiness. “But now I’m not scared in the least. Why? I was…I think…I mean I should be; I know I should be. Hell, I should be pissing myself right now! What is…? Have I gone crazy?”
“It’s not strange at all,” I answered. “The toxins have a calming effect on humans.” I winced inwardly with chagrin. “Well, usually.”
“Toxins?”
“Not what you think,” I assured her, seeing the worry make creases in her once smooth brow. “You haven’t been poisoned. But I am keeping you a bit calmer than you ought to be.”
“So you’re messing with my mind?” the woman asked, her face growing into a mask of disgust despite the lack of fear, thanks to my holding it back within her mind. She did not like this, and I could not blame her.
“Only to keep your emotions from clouding your judgment,” I said. “I wanted you to clearly understand what has happened to you…and why I now must ask for your forgiveness.”
She fixed me with a shrewd, almost distrustful look. “Forgiveness? For holding back my fear? To be honest, I think I ought to be thankful for that.”
“You shouldn’t be,” I said, as calmly as she had been. “You might not like it when I release you from that restraint. It’s another thing that I must apologize for, to be honest. But that’s not the first reason.”
“Then what is it?” she asked.
“The first drink is usually voluntary,” I explained, my voice cracking with my grief. I swallowed hard, and reached out for her hand, which was limp in my own, but comfortingly warm. “We normally never take a human by force. A human must make a deliberate choice if he or she is to become a host. I robbed you of that choice. I couldn’t help myself.” I felt the tears stream down my face, no longer able to prevent them. I lay upon the pillow in her lap. “Please…forgive me. I beg of you!”
I felt the woman’s hand touch my head, and run itself through the thick curls of my hair, as white as my skin. Her lap shook as distantly, I heard a gentle laugh.
“Boy…the movies and books never say anything about this. A vampire with a conscience, begging me for forgiveness for drinking from me without permission? Who’d have thought?”
She touched my cheek, and I looked into her face. My vision was clouded with my tears, but I could still see her gray eyes wide in confusion and wonder behind her glasses. “God, and you’re even crying! I should be the basket case here. I should be disgusted; I should be scared to death. If this isn’t a dream, then this is too crazy for words.”
I kept still, feeling her roiling thoughts and emotions trying desperately to sort themselves out. Then at last, I heard her sigh.
“I…I guess I forgive you. I mean you look sorry enough. And you seem so nice, despite what happened.”
“I’m not a monster,” I said. “And if I had been more in control, I would never have done what I did. Nor would I have had the need to hold your fear back. It’s the only thing keeping your thoughts rational…but it’s immoral for me to keep that restraint on you.” I stood and stepped back from the bed.
“Then why did you?” she asked, consternation leaked into her voice, and I felt it flow into her thoughts. “Now that I’ve had a moment to think about it, I can’t say that I like having my mind messed with.”
“As I said, it was only so that you would understand what happened,” I replied. “And now that you do, I will release that restraint.”
Before she could speak, I let go of the wall that I placed in her psyche, allowing the floodgates of her fear to flow free. I could only keep a desperate hold on the hope that she could see through the irrationality of that resurgent fear, and remember our conversation.
The fear burst forth from the woman’s heart like the wails of a thousand banshees. I winced as I heard her scream, and saw her shrink away from me, and curl herself tightly against the headboard of the bed, her gray eyes wide with the terror that I remembered from when I first fed from her.
My shame grew, and I collapsed into the chair, burying my face in my hands as the grief returned, drawing me into myself with self-punishing torment. I guessed that I had failed. I would have to alter her memory, as dangerous as it would be, and then set her loose. Afterwards, I would have Haas set one of his thaumaturgists as a temporary guard until I could be certain that no harm would come to her.
I wallowed so deeply in my sorrow that I had not even realized that the woman’s screams had long since ended. I believe it was the silence that drew my attention at last from my thoughts, and before I could raise my head, I felt a soft, warm hand touch my own. The blood scent from this human was indescribable, and it shamed me even more.
“You can…cry?” I looked up from my hands, and she shrank back.
“I can,” I said.
<
br /> The woman was terrified, and yet she swallowed back her fear to come to me…to touch me. And then I looked into her heart to see the hidden depths of her courage. An admiration grew within me, in spite of my shame.
“You said you were sorry.”
“More sorry than you will ever know,” I said.
She knelt before me and removed a handkerchief from the breast pocket of her blouse. She presented it to me, and I accepted.
“You didn’t have to let go of my fear, did you?” she asked. “You could have kept it from me?”
I nodded.
“But you didn’t.”
I felt a great deal of her fear melt away.
“Then I forgive you.”
“Thank you,” I whispered, and the guilt fell away like a leaden cloak. I wiped the tears away and smiled at her, laughing in spite of myself. “You’ll find that there are many things about us that the books and movies never told you about. I can teach you, if you’d like.”
The woman was silent for a long time. I felt her consider my words, the intense curiosity and courage that had overpowered her fear now wrestling with her baser instincts.
“I want to know more,” she said at last. “This is something new, even if it is kinda creepy. But I find it compelling, and, well, don’t ask me why. What you did showed me that you’re a most likely good person on the inside, and I think that’s what made me overcome my fear. And though I’m still a little weirded out by all this, I’m already in it, aren’t I? I’m actually intrigued. After all, how much worse can it get?”
“You’ll be surprised,” I said. “You know, I never did get your name.”
“It’s Amelia,” she said, and the beginnings of a smile at last appeared on her face. “Amelia Grayson.”
I wiped the remaining tears from my face, and then folded the handkerchief and tucked it into my pocket. “I’m Talante.”
“No last name?” Amelia asked, a puzzled look having crossed her face before she spoke.