by Aubrey Rose
"No. You won't even tell me what this is about." Jenny crossed her arms.
"You don't want to know," Liz said. And you'd never believe it.
"Is this about Robb Chatham? Did he reject you or something?"
"No!" Liz cried.
"So he loves you?"
"No! Yes! I don't— I don't— " Liz was so flustered that she almost answered with the first thought that popped into her head: I hope so.
"Which is it, Liz?" Jenny said, standing up and facing Liz.
"I don't know. I can't—"
"Do you love him?"
"Yes!"
Liz shut her mouth abruptly. She hadn't even known it herself until she said it. The man she knew was a monster. The man who had hurt her. The man who had given her so much pleasure, who had been gentle and passionate in equal measure.
She loved him. That was the strange feeling that had made her heart ache to think of never seeing him again.
"That's why you're leaving?" Jenny continued. "You're just going to go running away because you're scared of your feelings? Liz, I don't get why you're making this such a big deal. He's a professor. Not even! He's just a lab director."
And a vampire.
"No," Liz said, shaking her head.
"You can't imagine anything that doesn't fit into your perfect little world," Jenny said. Her face turned dark. "You're going to up and leave after one little messup."
"That's not it," Liz protested.
"Life is messy. Love is messy. You can't just shove things into neat little slots."
"You don't understand!"
"I think I understand more than you do," Jenny said. She walked over to the bedroom door and looked back. Hurt and disappointment were written all over her face. "But hey, go. Take a year off. Maybe you'll meet a hottie somewhere else."
"I'm sorry, Jenny." Liz wanted to stay. She wanted to stay so badly. But she couldn't, not knowing Robb's secret. "Will you get the notebook for me?"
"No! I'm not going to let you walk away without facing him."
"But—"
"No. You two should talk things out. I'm going out."
"Now?"
"I need a drink." Jenny's voice was flat, and Liz longed to hug her, tell her that everything was all right. Things weren't alright, though, and no amount of talking would fix the underlying facts. Jenny turned away, and all Liz could do was listen as her former roommate and lab partner slammed the apartment door behind her.
Liz threw the armful of clothes she had into the suitcase. She felt numb. All of her work was over. Her life as she knew it was gone. She would go back to America, empty-handed, and start again. For all of her effort, all of her work, to end up with nothing. Nothing...
She had to get her notebook back.
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
Robb had already forgotten about the body in his trunk when the police lights flashed in his rearview mirror. He was so close to his apartment! He kept driving, hoping to make it to his street. Then the sirens came on.
"Shit." He pulled over, his heart beginning to race. He'd been distracted, thinking about Liz and ignoring all of Thad's phone calls. He was so close to home—he could see his apartment down the street! Could he make it to the garage?
Robb looked up in his mirror. The officer was already getting out of his car.
"Shit. Shit. Shit." He grabbed his phone and dialed the first number on his autodial. Gerry answered right away.
"Yes, sir?"
"Gerry, I'm on the street outside. A cop just pulled me over. Can you come down?"
"Yes, sir. Your friend is here, sir."
"Great. I need you here before I say something stupid."
"I'll—ah—I'll be down in a second." Gerry's voice registered no surprise.
Should he have told him there was a dead body in the car he was driving? Too late now, he supposed. The police officer was knocking on his car window. He rolled the window down.
"Would you mind stepping out of the car?" the officer said, a stern look on his face. Robb had never done well with authority, and he felt his anger and frustration bubbling up to the surface. He tamped it down. Not the time for this, Robb.
"Lucky for you, this is my stop, officer," Robb said brightly. "I'm sorry I was speeding. I was in a hurry to get home to my dying mother."
"You weren't speeding. You ran a red light," the officer said. "And then you didn't pull over immediately."
"I pulled over as soon as I heard you, officer," Robb said, biting down on the inside of his cheek.
Gerry was already crossing the street and heading toward them. Robb said a silent prayer of thanks. His butler was an expert at getting him out of messes.
"Apologies, sir," Gerry said.
"Who are you?" the officer said.
"I'm his caretaker."
"Caretaker?"
"I can take care of any traffic violations."
"No, I need to talk to him," the officer said, pointing his pen in Robb's face. "License, please."
"You're going to pretend you don't know who I am?" Robb said.
The man leered at Robb, and Robb dug into his pocket, pulling out his wallet and handing it to the cop.
"Keep the change," he said. The police officer eyed the bills inside and Gerry pressed his lips together. Was that not how you were supposed to bribe the police?
"Would you mind opening your trunk?" the officer asked, closing the wallet. His voice was hard, demanding, and Robb immediately reacted.
"I'd rather not."
"Why's that? What have you got in there?"
"You mean apart from the sixty pounds of opiates I smuggled in from Manchester?" Robb said.
"Excuse me?" He held out the wallet back to Robb, but Robb didn't take it.
"Sir Chatham is such a jokester," Gerry said, stepping in between Robb and the officer and plucking the wallet out of the officer's hand. "Please, let's get this situation taken care of."
"Ah—erm, yes. Let's," the officer said. He looked strangely at Robb, or, rather, at Sir Chatham.
"Thank you, Gerry," Robb said, and slouched against the side of the Porsche.
"The commissioner is a personal friend of Sir Chatham's, after all," Gerry continued. "And I would hate for him to hear that his friend had behaved so ingraciously toward a member of our fine police force."
"Not at all!" The police officer closed his book, evidently at a loss for what to say. He glanced at Robb, then at the Porsche. "But, but—"
"Sir Chatham apologizes for the indiscretion," Gerry said, darting a sharp glance at Robb. Robb nodded in mute agreement, a tight smile on his face.
"Oh! I mean, oh. Yes."
Gerry was counting out the bills slyly, his back turned to the police car's dash camera. He shook the officer's hand and the officer's eyes lit up as he realized the transaction.
"I trust that this will take care of things. I'm sure that our relations with London's service officers can continue to be fruitful, and I hope that this incident will soon be forgotten by both sides," Gerry said.
The officer looked down at the few bills.
"Is this—ah—all it takes to forget?" His eyes twinkled greedily.
Gerry glanced over at Robb, who nodded again. He had to get out of this somehow, and a few hundred pounds wasn't going to break him. The butler handed the police officer the rest of the wad of bills.
"Thank you very much, sirs," the officer said, bobbing his head excitedly. He drove away in the police car.
Robb handed his butler the keys. He didn't want to drive that car for another second.
"Gerry, would you park this for me?"
"Sir?"
"There's a body in the trunk."
Gerry's eyes widened only slightly.
"Very well, sir. Indoor parking, then. Shall I bring it up?"
"I'll be down to help," Robb said. "Just don't want to be in that damned car any more." Lord, he hated the police.
By the time Robb and Gerry had hauled the body upstairs, Vasin had
already arrived. He helped them lift the body up onto the lab table and began to prepare his medical equipment.
The lab was brightly lit, white and pristine. Robb regretted having to dirty it. Especially for such a friend as Thad.
Thaddeus came strolling in the door from the foyer.
“I parked in the downstairs parking,” he said.
“I thought I told you to park far away,” Robb said, his jaw clenched.
“Not a lot of parking this side of London,” Thad said. “Posh place you have here, eh?”
“What did you tell the guard?”
"That I was visiting you. Why is he here?" Thad pointed at Gerry. Gerry politely said nothing. "I thought he was the doctor."
"That's my butler," Robb said. He suppressed the desire to strangle Thaddeus for being so obvious about everything. The idiot.
"I'm the doctor," Vasin said, raising one glove-covered hand in greeting. "You're the patient?"
But Thaddeus had spun back to Robb.
"You said there would only be the doctor. Why. Is. He. Here." He pointed at Gerry accusingly.
"I'll just leave," Gerry said, bowing slightly.
Thad was at the door in an instant, blocking his path.
"You're not leaving."
His eyes were wild, manic. He probably hadn't eaten for what, weeks? His eyes tracked Gerry's jugular vein. Robb stepped forward.
"Thad. Thad."
"He can't see me. He's not allowed. Nobody can see me here. Nobody can know."
"Thad," Robb said, touching the old vampire's elbow, "These are the only two people I trust with my secret. I promise you there's no need for alarm."
"Alarm? You think this is alarm?" Thad's eyes slitted, but he leaned back and his shoulders relaxed.
"You can stay, Gerry," Robb said. "In case we need any help."
"We should get started soon," Vasin interjected. "This man's been dead for too long already. I'm not sure the transfer will work, but we should begin immediately."
Robb sent a look at Thad as if to say I told you so.
"On the table," Vasin said. His calm seemed to rub off on Thad, who obeyed his order. "Ah, Gerry, is it?"
"Yes, sir?"
"Would you hand me that syringe on the counter there?"
Gerry assisted Vasin as thought he'd been in medical practice his whole life, Robb was pleased to see.
"How do you do this?" Thad asked, as he lay back on the lab table. The dead body was on the table next to him. With all of the tubing that Vasin had set up, Robb's lab looked like a scene out of Frankenstein.
"Oh," Vasin said, evidently a bit surprised. "You've never gone through this process before? You must be young."
"He doesn't bother with the finer details most of the time," Robb said. "Do you, Thad?"
Thad shook his head. Vasin tore the packaging off of the syringe and handed it to Gerry.
"It's a simple process," Vasin said. "We start with the blood transfer. This will pinch a little." He slid the syringe into Thad's arm.
"Ow!" Thad cried.
"Just a moment," Vasin said, pressing the plunger down quickly. "Blood thinner to help keep your veins open. I take it anesthesia doesn't work on you, either?"
"No," Thad said.
"Then this," Vasin said, "will definitely hurt."
Deftly, he slid a needle into the inside of Thad's elbow, and Thad groaned. Blood began to flow through the needle into the tubing. The tubing ran across the gap between the tables and connected to the dead body.
"We must drain a third or so of your blood into the body," Vasin said. "Your kind of blood will replicate, change the DNA. If they test the body, they will find it to be a match with you."
"A third of my blood?" Thad was already looking pale.
"Any more and your blood will start to heal the body. Ah, pass me that scalpel," he said. Gerry handed over the steel knife. It glinted under the fluorescent lights.
"Heal him? But he's dead," Thad said.
"Exactly," Vasin said. "We don't want to create any monsters."
"Like you're not a monster already," Robb said. Thad hissed.
"Excellent. Robert," Vasin said. "You'll need to hold him down unless you want me to get the straps."
"Straps?" Thad's eyes bulged red and awful in his head. His skin was white from blood loss.
"The second part hurts worse," Robb said. "He'll be taking your teeth out."
Thad's eyes rolled back in his head with pain. Robb came to the head of the lab table and placed his hands on the vampire's shoulders.
"Get it over with," Thad whispered. "God, I envy humans their painkillers."
Robb nodded to Vasin, whose eyes and mouth were covered with the lab mask already. Vasin placed a metal brace into Thad's mouth to keep the jaw open. Thad opened his eyes, wild with fear.
"We'll do it as quickly as possible," Robb said. A pang of sympathy passed through him. He'd been through this process before, and he knew the pain that Thad was going to experience. Thad nodded tensely, his mouth filled with steel equipment.
Vasin reached in and yanked out the first tooth.
The howl that Thad emitted echoed off the walls of the laboratory. Gerry winced and stepped back from the lab tables. Despite his attempt at preparation, Thad bucked so hard that he threw off Robb's hands for a moment. Blood splashed down the front of his chest. Robb pressed him back down.
"Easy, Thad," he said, as Vasin reached in again with the pliers. "They'll grow back."
Thad's hands were fists at his side, and he trembled with pain as Vasin continued his work. His second scream was a gurgle of blood.
Robb knew how he felt. He remembered Vasin tying him down to the lab table with straps, performing the same operation. He remembered the blood pooling in his throat and choking him. The horrific crack of bone when each tooth was extracted. The pain. The pain.
Thad coughed, and blood sprayed over Robb's arms. Vasin was already drenched with it down the front of his lab coat. He'd prepared well; he hadn't left an inch of his own skin exposed to the blood. Still, he was forced to wipe the blood off of his goggles, smearing red across the plexiglass lens.
"Just a bit more," Robb said, knowing that Vasin would work quickly. Thad whined, his body twisting on the table, but the blood loss had made him weaker. It was easier for Robb to hold him down.
Tooth by tooth, Vasin continued. He left the pulled teeth on the chest of the dead body. Robb noticed with a shudder that the dead body's veins had begun to pulse with the transferred blood.
"The blood," he said. Vasin peered over.
"Time to stop the transfer," he said. As he reached for the needle in Thad's arm, Thad jerked. The needle fell from Vasin's hand, spraying blood everywhere from the pressurized tube. Vasin pinched the tubing off at the source, but the floor was already slick with blood, the white tile spattered scarlet red. Gerry had backed up to the side of the lab. He was out of his element and knew it, from his ashen expression.
"Almost done," Vasin said. He pulled out another tooth, then another, working quickly, not bothering to be careful anymore with the bloody teeth. There was blood all over everything, anyway, Robb supposed.
The coppery smell made Robb's stomach turn. The red, all the red—
"Robb? I—"
Robb heard the gasp and looked up to the front of his lab. Liz was standing in the doorway, her face awash with terror. Her eyes darted from side to side, taking in everything. The two bodies on the lab table, one moving, one not. The blood all over Vasin and Robb. The blood coating the floor and the lab tables. Before she could scream, Gerry stepped in front of her, blocking her view.
"Hello, miss," the butler said, clasping his hands behind his back, always the consummate professional. "Can I get you a cup of tea?"
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Liz stumbled backwards and caught herself on the doorframe even as the lab door clicked shut behind her. Her hands felt numb and from a distance she heard the card key to the laboratory clattering to the grou
nd.
Blood. So much blood.
"Who is she?" One of the men on the lab table, the one Robb had been standing over, sat up. His hair and skin were completely white, and blood was dripping from his toothless mouth. The words came out as a mumble, spattering blood.
Liz opened her mouth to scream but she could not find her breath. All of the air in the room was gone. The butler took hold of her arm to steady her, but she could not take her eyes off of the bloody monster who was now looking straight at her.
"Who are you?" he growled.
"It's okay, Thad." Robb came around the table and stood between her and the creature. She could see the man's teeth beginning to sprout. Not teeth. Fangs.
"Is she one of us?"
"No."
Liz's eyes darted to the man—a surgeon?—holding a bloody piece of something in his hand. He was bent over the other man, and Liz heard the terrible crack of tooth and bone as he used his pliers to pull out something from the man's mouth.
"Robb," Liz said, but she didn't know if she could even speak. There was a roar in her ears and she realized that she was about to faint. She closed her eyes and leaned against the doorframe. She heard another sickening crack and then the man spoke again, his voice murky and wet.