Demoniac
Author: UtsSQ
Rated: Soft R for violence and implied
sexual scenes, language-beware…I get kind of gross in this one…lol
All right-I went ahead and did it-this
will complete what I am going to call my ‘Death & Darkness’ Trilogy, for
lack of a better title. This one
features Batista with support from my other characters that most of you should
already know…lol. Enjoy!
Prologue
The music was the worst part.
Loud, thumping, pounding, it shook the
walls, rattled the glasses at the bar.
The women did not seem to care. They danced on, moved to the beat, their
faces never losing the bored, far-away look he’d come to associate with most of
them.
On some occasions, something was
different. One of the women would stand
out. She’d be dancing, moving just like
the others, but more into it. She’d smile at the men who sat around watching
her, making eye contact, enjoying every minute of her power over them.
That’s what he was looking for. And
that is what he’d found. One girl,
hardly more than twenty years old, gyrated her hips to the heavy bass. Something about her made her seem
more…there, more real than the other women on the stage. A certain vitality seemed to flow from her,
reaching across the room to grab his attention. He met her eyes and saw them
widen, saw her suck in a breath as he beckoned her to him.
She made her way to his table. Without a word she began dancing for him,
for him only. Her eyes never left
his. He enthralled her just as she had
enthralled him at first glance. She had such innocent blue eyes. He smiled slowly. This was definitely the one he’d be leaving with tonight.
The song ended. Instead of going backstage, the girl stood
before him unsure of what to do. He let his smile widen. He rose to his feet and held out his
hand. The girl took it with no
hesitation.
He led her through the club, out the back door. There was a dark alley, a place he was very familiar with. He’d come to this very club on several
occasions, seeking a suitable woman for his games.
It was a bit chilly out. The girl did not seem to notice. He pulled her against him and kissed her
deeply, his hands roaming her bare skin.
He felt power building up inside him as it always did when he took
another one. He made short work or
removing the tiny panties she was wearing and lay her on the cold concrete.
With a laugh he pulled out of her mind, letting her take control back. Horrified at her position beneath him, she
began struggling. Ignoring her useless
screaming, her biting and scratching, he entered her brutally, thrusting again
and again at her body, reveling in her pain.
She screamed again and again as he
used her. It did not matter. The music of the club was too loud, the club
itself was on the outskirts of the town limits. No one would hear.
Her nails raked at his face. He laughed again, coldly, relishing the
brief flash of pain that faded into pleasure at her hands. He loved it when they fought. It made the
finish that much sweeter.
With a hoarse shout he climaxed, sorry
that it was over so soon, but knowing the best was still to come. The girl lay on the ground, sobbing softly
into her hands, curled onto her side.
He got dressed and kneeled over her, his hand stroking her side. He smirked, his eyes glowing in the cold
night air as his fingernails grew. The
tips sharpened, became pointed.
Satisfied, he gave her one last caress.
Drawing back, he slammed his fingers into her side, feeling the skin
split against his forceful entry. The
girl had time to wheeze one more scream out before he took her heart in his
hands and began pulling it, using his nails to slice at anything that got in
the way.
Triumphantly he got to his feet, her still warm heart a pleasant weight in his
hand. His nails had returned to normal.
He’d gotten no blood on his clothing.
He studied the body for a few minutes, basking in the glory of his
kill. He reached down and grabbed the
dead girl’s hand, and began dragging her along the alleyway. He did not want her body discovered just
yet. That would ruin his fun.
He carelessly tossed the corpse into
his car and drove toward his house. Her
heart was still in his hand. He glanced
at it repeatedly, his grin growing wider.
She had been something, all right.
He could feel her heart calling to him, telling him what to do. It was hard to resist the urge to pull to
the side of the road, but he managed.
That was also the same every time.
At his house in the wood, the man
climbed from the car and began dragging the lifeless girl to the back. There was an old barn there, unused for many
years. He had found a use for it.
With regret he set her heart aside,
careful not to damage it. The girl he took into the barn and after thinking for
a moment, put her body into an old water trough that rested against the wall. Hanging over her head was the body of
another woman although that one was well into decomposition. There were bodies
throughout the barn, some playfully posed, some strung up, some torn apart in
rage. He could not always control
it. Tonight had been a good night. He’d done well, and he’d earned his reward.
He tenderly traced a finger down the
dead girl’s face, then shifted her head until she appeared to be staring at the
woman hanging above her. Satisfied with
her positioning, he went to reclaim her heart.
It was still a bit warm. With a
grin of pure happiness the man walked into his house, cradling the organ
against his chest. She’d like this one, he knew she would. She had to. He was starting to lose his patience. She had to see what he’d be willing to do to
be with her. That was all there was to
it.
1
Someone was crying.
Dave stepped onto the back porch and
looked around. It was just past noon,
and although the sun was shining, it was chilly outside. He scanned the yard,
his eyes coming to rest on Alex, who was sitting under a tree with his knees
drawn up, crying as if his heart were breaking.
Alex was Samantha and Glen’s young
son. He’d just turned five a few days
before. Dave walked over and sat down on the grass next to the little boy.
“What’s wrong, kid?” Dave asked affectionately. Alex sniffled and looked up, wiping at his
eyes with his hands.
“They’re so sad. It hurts.” Alex spoke
as if that explained everything.
Dave just shook his head in
confusion. Alex pointed to the left,
toward the woods. Dave glanced that
way, frowning a bit.
“Is somebody out there? Did they hurt
you?” Feeling angry at the thought, Dave started to rise to his feet. Alex stopped him.
“Nobody’s there.” The little boy
sighed and looked down. Dave could see
how frustrated he was, that he didn’t have the words to explain what was
bothering him.
“Should I go get your mom?” Dave asked
Alex softly.
“No.
She can’t make them stop either.” Dejected, Alex stood up.
Dave grabbed his hand. “The only thing over there is an old
graveyard. Through the trees. You haven’t been playing out there have
you? That place might be dangerous. Those stones fall over all the time…” But
Alex was shaking his head before Dave could finish the lecture.
“Nobody plays there anymore.” With
that Alex tugged away and wandered toward the house. Dave sat for a few minutes, wondering what the hell was wrong
with him. He’d been acting weird for a
while. Glen was worried, he could tell,
but there wasn’t anything they could do. Alex seemed to be struggling with
something big, and refused to say more than a few words about it.
With a sigh, Dave rose to his feet,
intending to find Samantha and tell her what he’d seen. It was amazingly easy-she was coming
downstairs when he ventured into the living room, following a grumbling Katie.
“Jack gets to go all the time…” The
little girl was muttering under her breath.
“Well Jack is sixteen, pumpkin. He’s almost grown up. You still have a bit of growing to do.”
“It’s not fair.” She pouted, the
spotted Dave standing at the foot of the stairs. Katie dazzled him with a sunny
smile. “Hi, Uncle Dave.”
“Hey, handful.” Dave grinned back at
her. He was always in awe of how the
six year old could change gears so quickly. “You giving your mom a hard time?
Cuz I totally approve.”
Katie giggled. Samantha playfully swatted her as she moved
past her daughter. “Keep encouraging her.
I’ll send her to live with you.”
“Threaten me why don’t ya.” Dave said
with a smirk. “What’s going on?”
“Miss Know it all here thinks she’s
old enough to go out hunting with her dad and Jack.”
“I am old enough.” Katie said
emphatically, crossing her arms over her chest.
“Not quite, darlin’.” Dave tweaked her
on the nose. Katie refused to be joked
out of her mood.
“Jack was hunting when he was ten!
That’s just four years older!”
“Jack never hunted when he was
ten. He had to fight in
self-defense. That’s not the same
thing. Stop trying to twist it to suit your argument, future lawyer.” Samantha
said wryly.
“Mom…” Katie sounded so frustrated it
made Dave laugh. She shot him a withering glance.
“I’ll tell you what…I’ll hire you to
work for me.” Dave grinned at the way her eyes lit up. “When you’re eighteen. After you’ve have training.”
“How is that fair?” Katie said,
huffing.
“She may not need training. She might be able to argue the fangs and
dogs to death.” Samantha nudged her daughter.
“How about you go downstairs and finish your homework? And help Nick out
a little.” All the kids were home schooled, except for Jack, who decided he was
ready to go out and give high school a shot.
“Nick never needs help.” Katie
muttered under her breath. She walked
toward the kitchen. Samantha watched
her go, a smile on her face.
“Poor kid’s gonna be just like you
when she grows up.” Dave observed.
“I know. That’s probably why we butt heads so much.” She glanced at Dave,
then frowned. “What’s wrong?”
“How could you know something is
wrong?” Dave asked, leaning against the wall.
“My spidey senses are tingling. Is it Glen? Jack?”
“No and no. It’s Alex, actually.” Dave pushed from the wall and wandered to
the sofa across the room. Samantha
followed, leaning on the arm of the couch.
“He was outside crying a few minutes ago.”
“Is he all right? Is he hurt?”
Samantha half rose, but Dave waved a hand at her.
“He’s fine as far as I can tell. Physically anyway.” He paused,
thinking. “He said that ‘they were
sad’. And that it hurt him. And he pointed to the woods.” Dave
shrugged. “I told him there wasn’t
anything there but an old cemetery. I
think he got made and walked off. He
said they weren’t playing there or anything, so I don’t know…”
Samantha’s frown of worry smoothed out
as he spoke. He trailed off, not
knowing what exactly he was trying to say.
“I think I might have a good idea what it’s about.” Samantha finally
spoke.
“Well, I’ll be glad to hear it. Kinda
freaky, how he was talking.” Dave said with a lift of his eyebrow.
“I think Alex might be a little
empathic.”
“Empathic? That’s a new one on me.”
Dave frowned.
“He can sense what people are
feeling. Or in this case, what the dead
are feeling. And he feels it too.”
Samantha shrugged. “I had a suspicion a
while back about it.”
“These kids and their weird powers...”
Dave muttered.
“Tell me about it.” Samantha
laughed. There was Lily with her super
strength. Nick with his telepathy. And
now it seemed that Alex was developing a skill of his own. “Poor Katie’s gonna feel left behind
again.” Of all the children, save Jack,
Katie was the only one so far who had exhibited no signs of being anything
other than a normal human girl born to normal human parents. Samantha was glad, but also knew that Katie
felt different from the other kids. And
she didn’t like it.
“He’s pretty upset.” Dave said,
bringing the conversation back to Alex.
“I’ll talk to him. He’s gonna have to learn to control it or go
crazy.” Samantha rubbed her eyes wearily.
“Glen still planning on coming in tonight?”
Glen, Jack, and Mark had been out on a
hunting mission. Well, the actual name
for it was a ‘security’ mission. In the
past few years, police and lawmakers had started to crack down on hunters,
branding them vigilantes. Dave had
decided to market the house as a security firm. It seemed to satisfy the local cops, who wanted nothing to do
with the rogue fang or dog that occasionally popped up.
There had been reports of a wolf that
had been tearing up a town a few hours away.
Glen had hoped to wrap everything up today. Samantha hoped he was right in hoping. They’d been gone almost a
month, and she was tired of living in this house. Although it was huge, and she liked the people there, she felt
most at home at Glen’s big Victorian house on the other side of town.
“As far as I…” Dave didn’t
finish. Ashley, a young girl who had
taken over some secretarial duties, stepped into the room.
“Dave…you have a call. The woman said it was urgent.” She
shrugged. “I tried to get a name, but
she wouldn’t tell me.”
“That’s all right Ash. I’ll take it, anyway.” Dave was bored.
Hopefully it would be something to do.
Samantha followed his lead, meaning to
find Alex and have a talk with her boy.
Ashley smiled at her uncertainly.
Samantha patted the younger girl’s shoulder on her way past. “Don’t worry, you’re doing a good job.”
“Not as good as Allison, but I’m
trying.” Ashley said with a laugh.
Allison and Dave had broken up and it had not been pretty. Allison had decided it was best to seek her
fortune at another house. Dave had not
been too sorry to see her go. She’d
been pushing for more permanence in their relationship and he resisted every
step. Samantha moved on, seeking out
Alex for a little heart to heart talk.
“Hello?”
Dave took the cordless phone into the kitchen, planning to grab a drink.
“David?” The feminine voice was
smooth, soft. Dave recognized it but
could not place it.
“That’s me. Who is this?”
There was a pause. “This is…it’s me, Diane.” Her voice seemed
to get softer at the admittance of her name.
“DJ?” Dave almost could not believe
it. Diane Jones, affectionately known as DJ, had been his longest lasting
relationship. It that case, she had
been the one to shy away from commitment, leaving him to give her an ultimatum. She’d refused to be pushed. He moved on, getting his hunting job with
Mark. DJ had seemed to all but
disappear after that. “Deej…how the
hell are you? What’s going on? Ash said it was urgent…”
“It is. I wish this were a social call.
I have a problem. I’m hoping you
can help me with it.” Her sultry voice
brought back memories, memories Dave thought he’d left behind for good. He closed his eyes and took a deep calming
breath.
“All right. I’m listening.” Dave sat at the table, grabbing a nearby pen and
notebook. He took notes as DJ spoke,
spilling out the story of what had been happening to her for the last few
months.
2
“I just get home and you’re telling me
you’re leaving with Dave to go help one of his friends, and you don’t even know
what’s going on?”
Glen stared across the bed at
Samantha, who was calmly packing her bag.
“I’m not leaving this very minute, but yes, I am going. You got your
fun, now I get mine.”
“You think this is fun?” Glen asked
his wife, incredulous.
“After spending months at a time
playing babysitter, yes, this is the best time I’ve had in years.” Samantha
grinned at him. “And don’t question my
motherhood status. I love the
kids. But I can’t sit here at home all
the time. You aren’t the only hunter in
this family. I’m going stir crazy.”
Glen couldn’t help but smile at her,
although that little frown of worry still clouded his features. “I just don’t
want anything to happen to you, that’s all. We have our family to worry about.”
“Look, bud. I let you go runnin’ around, killing all the fangs and dogs you
want. Just give me this one thing.”
“Mmm…and this one thing will lead to
another. And another.” Glen shook his head.
“I can’t believe Dave even asked you to go. I thought he’d rather have a rattlesnake watch his back than
you.”
“All the snakes are hibernating.”
Samantha said glibly, zipping her bag shut.
“I was hoping to spend a little time
with you, Sammy.”
“We have all night.” She said,
grinning at the suggestive tone in his voice.
“There is that I suppose.” Glen said
with a smirk. “Although I did want to
see the kids…”
“They’re sleeping.” Samantha tossed
her bag to the floor and climbed onto the bed.
“If you want me, come get me baby.
It’s been a while.”
“That it has.” Glen followed her lead,
joining her on the bed.
**
In the basement of the main house, Dave
was pacing the floor, occasionally running a hand over his head. Mark and Christine were watching him, a bit
amused, mostly concerned, as he explained what little he knew.
“She just outta the blue calls and
asks for help. She says somebody is stalking her, and that this somebody might
be right up my alley. Meaning a fang or
a dog. DJ always knew what I was, that
I was a hunter. I didn’t try to hide it from her.”
“So she’s not sure who it is?”
Christine asked, toying with a lock of hair.
Mark put his arm around her comfortingly.
“She didn’t say one way or the other
on the phone.”
“Is she sure this guy is dangerous?”
Mark asked. “I mean, you said before
that she was pretty hot. Maybe he’s
just moonin’ over her.”
Dave laughed. “Yeah, she’s a looker. But she’s scared to death. I can tell. I
want to go help her.”
“I don’t mind running things while
you’re gone.” Mark said with a shrug.
“I’m sure Glen will help. He
always does.”
“Try not to kill Sammy, though. It might piss Glen off.” Christine said with
a laugh.
Dave rolled his eyes. Yes, he’d asked Samantha if she wanted to go
with him. She’d jumped at the chance to
get out of the house and do something.
They both shared that same feeling of being boxed in. He hoped he would not regret asking. They did not get along as a general rule, it
was just the way they were.
“I won’t kill her. I might need her. You know…she’s got the vamp skills.”
“She might be rusty. Glen’s been keeping her close to home.” Mark
chuckled.
“It’s like riding a bike.” David said
with a smile. “Besides, she’s strong,
like Lily. I hate to admit it but I need her on this.” He glanced at Mark. “Are you sure you don’t mind?”
“Hell, why would I? It’s temporary.”
Mark laughed. “When are you heading out?”
“Tomorrow night. I didn’t want to just up and leave
everything in the air.” Dave sounded a bit frustrated at that. Mark smiled at Christine.
“You don’t have to stick around on our
account.” Christine said with a laugh.
“It’s not your account.” Dave rolled
his eyes. Mark and Christine both
started laughing. “Trust me, if I thought Glen would let her leave, I’d go
right now.”
“Good call.” Mark chuckled. “If you
need anything, extra hands, anything at all, you call and let us know.”
“I will.”
“And you can tell Sammy not to
worry. I’ll keep an eye on the kids.
She’s done it enough for us.”
“I will.” Dave sighed and once again
rubbed his head.
“You really like this girl, huh?”
Christine asked, sounding awed.
Dave decided not to lie. “I asked her
to marry me. She said no.”
“She must be crazy.” Christine grinned
at him. “And not want to deal with all
this?” She gestured, indicating the room, the house, the life they led.
“It wasn’t just that. But I’m sure
that probably played a part.” Dave shook his head. “I should go pack. I want
to leave as soon as I can get Sammy away from Glen.” With that he turned on his
heel and headed for the door. Mark and Christine exchanged another knowing
look.
“Think he still has a thing for her?”
Mark asked sarcastically.
“Oh, that’s a given.” Christine
grinned wickedly. “How about you take
me upstairs and show me that you still have a ‘thing’ for me?” Mark laughed and
happily obliged her.
**
Dave made one last stop in the kitchen
for the night, wanting to grab a bottle of water to take to his room. Lily and Nick were there, sharing a bowl of
popcorn.
“You guys are up late.” He said,
ruffling Nick’s hair on the way past.
“Mom said we could watch a movie.”
Lily said, sighing, looking at her brother.
“Dork here won’t decide which one.”
“I’m not a dork, Lil.” Nick’s voice
was all serious. He looked at his
sister with dark eyes, a smile on his lips.
“I don’t wanna watch that kissing crap that you like so much.”
David laughed at that. “I wouldn’t
want to watch it either.” He said, agreeing with the boy. Lily was red-faced.
“I don’t watch that stuff. That’s for
mushy grown-ups.” She huffed. At ten, she was still a tiny little thing, but
she made up for it in attitude. “I like
action movies.”
“Since when? Five minutes ago?” Nick
said with a smirk.
“What would you know, you’re still a
baby.” Lily said it with a worldly air.
Nick rolled his eyes.
“Dad still calls you his baby. How’s
my baby today?” He pinched Lily’s cheek.
He did a fairly accurate imitation of Mark’s deep voice. Lily heaved a put-upon sigh.
“I still think we can trade you in for
a kid sister.” She said, casting a withering glance at him.
“Aw…you love me.” Nick laughed and
playfully punched his sister’s arm.
Dave shook his head and left the kids to their argument. He had a lot to
do, and not a lot of time to do it in.
**
DJ paced her living room, fighting the
urge to lift the shades on the windows and look outside.
After that morning’s little ‘present’
she wasn’t entirely sure if she would ever go outside again. She’d stepped out to get the paper and had
kicked the small box on her porch. She
was hesitant to pick it up but knew she would have to. She also knew she should call the police,
but could not make herself do it. They
had done nothing for her so far, in fact they treated her problem as a joke, a
scam played on her by neighborhood kids.
It was easy for them to say that. And it was obvious why they said it. DJ was not just pretty, but beautiful. Soft dark hair, blue eyes, creamy skin. She used to be an actress, nothing major,
just a few small parts on television.
It had been boring though, not the glamorous life she’d imagined.
So she’d come back to her hometown to try to settle down. She was a writer, a
damn good one according to her publisher. Under her penname, she’d published
four books, each one progressively more popular than the last.
Her life had been good until a couple
of months ago when she’d gotten the first card. It was in her mailbox but there was no stamp, no return
address. Just three words were printed
on it in block letters: I LOVE YOU.
DJ dismissed it as a joke, of
course. The last person who had said
those particular words to her was Dave, and that had been a long time ago. She’d had flings since then, of course, but
had never come close to that kind of relationship again.
Too bad she’d ruined it with her freak
out and cold feet.
And it was so strange. Even after all this time, the first person
she’d wanted to call had been Dave. She fought the urge and called the police
when she got the third card. It had
been written in rusty red ink that she had been sure was blood. Once again, the
words I LOVE YOU had been inked in block letters. In smaller letters was the word ‘forever’.
It sent a chill down her back. A few days after that she’d gotten the first
package. It had no note, and contained
only a lock of dark hair, close to her own hair color.
The police had done nothing with that
either. A hoax was what they called
it. She had their attention at the next
several packages, but once again they could not do anything about it.
The packages got progressively gorier.
After the hair came an ear.
After the ear, a finger. Then a
hand. Female, all of the pieces he left
for her. DJ did not know how she knew
it, but she did.
She’d stopped going to the cops. They were looking at her as if she were the
crazy one. They would do nothing to help her, were not even trying to find the
guy who was doing this. They had no
bodies, no missing persons reports, no clues as to where he was getting the
parts for his little ‘gifts’.
The worst one, until that morning, had
come just three days ago. Inside a
small green box was a mound of tissue paper.
On top of the paper were two pieces of dark flesh. It had taken a moment, but DJ realized that
what she was looking at had once been the rosy nipples on some girl’s chest.
She’d gagged and thrown up in the sink at the thought of it.
She did not know how it could have
possibly gotten worse, but now she had an idea. In the box that was on her porch that morning, which she had
opened in some kind of strange trance.
It was red, fist sized,
glistening. Fresh. A human heart, the arteries and veins
jagged. It had obviously been ripped
from someone’s chest, some woman’s chest.
Crying, DJ had closed the box and had gone to her phone. She called the one person in the world that
would do something. At least, she hoped
he was still that person. She’d hurt
him, but he would come. She needed him
now more than she ever had.
3
“Wanna know my opinion?”
Dave sighed and shifted in the
driver’s seat. Samantha had been
unusually quiet during the trip. She’d
barely spoken on the plane, and they’d driven for an hour before she decided to
chime in.
“Not really, but I’m sure you’re going
to tell me anyway.” He said sarcastically.
“Of course I am.” Samantha smiled at
him. “I can’t imagine why you would
want me along on this little trip.
Although one small thing comes to mind.”
“Oh, and what’s that?”
“This woman of yours kinda scares
you.” Samantha poked his arm. Dave
laughed.
“Yeah. I’m scared to death.”
“You are. So I’m supposed to be the chaperone of this mission. Babysitting again.” She heaved a sigh. “You’re a grown up. Why would you need me to run interference?”
“It’s complicated.” Dave decided it
was probably best not to lie to her. Samantha could smell a lie a mile
away.
“Try me. It’s not like I can do
anything to get away from you.”
“Funny.” Dave bit his lip
thoughtfully. “Look, a long time ago DJ
and I were pretty heavy into each other.
It ended. I’m not sure if I’m
wanna even see her, let alone think about what might have been. So…”
“So I run interference. Keep your mind on the job.”
“I was hoping.”
“Damn.” Samantha started
laughing. “I lost that bet.”
“What bet?” Dave risked a glance in
her direction.
“Christine and I had a bet on this top
secret mission of yours. She said I’d be playing mediator. I said you would try to talk me into
pretending I was your new girlfriend-or even wife.”
Dave snorted. Samantha laughed merrily. “Shoot me if the thought ever crosses my
mind, please.”
“Oh, you like me and you know it.” She
leaned back in her seat. “Are we there
yet?”
Glad she’d changed the subject, Dave
turned his attention back to the road.
“Another twenty minutes or so.”
“This place is weird.” Her voice
sounded suddenly serious. Dave glanced
at her again. Samantha was staring out the window at the buildings that went by
at even intervals.
“What? The town?”
“Yeah. Strip clubs out the ass.
What kinda perv background do you come from?”
“It’s the army base.” Dave said with a
sigh. “And there are a couple of
underground casinos around here. The
clubs do good business. The only thing
that might outnumber ‘em are they tattoo parlors.”
“And this is where you grew up?”
Samantha sounded interested. Dave
wondered if he was just giving her ammo for some later insult-fest.
“Mostly. I worked at one of the tat places when I was a kid. Then I met a guy who thought I’d be a good
hunter.”
“The abridged version is never as good
as the uncut.” Samantha stated. The
buildings faded from sight. There was
nothing now but trees and road, and the dark sky above.
“That’s all I’ve got right now.” Dave
signaled a turn even though they were the only car on the road. It was almost dawn. The town didn’t really wake up until noon or
so.
Fifteen minutes of driving down
winding country roads brought them to DJ’s house. It was set back from the road, surrounded by trees, and every
window glowed with light from behind the curtains that were drawn over them.
“She’s definitely scared.” Samantha
stated the obvious as Dave parked the car and climbed out to stretch.
“I guess we’re going to find out why.”
Dave shrugged and led Samantha toward the porch. The front door opened and the light over the steps flashed on.
A woman appeared in the light. Her dark hair was pulled up, away from her
face. She looked tired. Too tired to be
scared at the moment. But apparently
she’d been waiting for them.
“Dave?” The name was a question in her
soft voice. Dave stepped toward her and
wrapped his arms around DJ, hugging her close, feeling her shudder against him.
“It’s gonna be all right, Deej.” He
rubbed her back affectionately. DJ
sniffled against his chest, holding him tight.
“I didn’t know who else to call.” She
whispered.
“Well, you made a good choice.” Dave
touched her chin, bringing her eyes to meet his in the glow from the porch
light. “I’m gonna do whatever I can
Deej.” They held each other’s gaze for a few long moments.
Samantha cleared her throat. Dave and DJ jumped. They had forgotten she was there. “I’m
Sammy. Since clod is not going to introduce me anytime soon.”
This got a smile from DJ as she
extracted herself from Dave’s arms, embarrassed. “Sorry. I’ve had a
horrible couple of months.”
“So I’ve heard.” Samantha grinned at
the other woman, then looked to Dave.
“How about we take this reunion inside, away from any prying eyes?”
DJ looked around, her expression
losing its brightness at the thought of being watched. Dave took her arm and
led her toward the door with Samantha at their heels.
Once inside, he made sure the locks
were engaged before following DJ into the living room. He had not been in this house in so long yet
everything felt as familiar to him as if he’d just left yesterday. Although the furniture was new, it was in
the same style and color that it had always been. The television was bigger. Those were the only differences he
noticed.
The three of them took seats and looked
at each other expectantly.
“It would help, I suppose, if I knew
exactly why we were here.” Samantha said, breaking the silence that had fallen
over them.
“Oh…” DJ blushed a bit and stole a
glance at Dave before turning her attention to Samantha. “Well…a few months ago I started getting
postcards…” She filled them in, telling them about the progression of ‘gifts’,
tearing up a bit at the most recent one.
She managed to choke back her emotions long enough to pull a small box
from under the couch. “I gave copies of the notes to the police. I kept them
all. I don’t know why, probably because
I just couldn’t believe this was happening…”
Samantha sorted through the box,
glancing at a few of the notes.
“Blood.”
“You think so too?” DJ sounded
relieved.
“I can smell it.” Samantha wrinkled
her nose. “Did you give the cops the
rest of the packages?”
“Most of them. They didn’t seem to want them though.” DJ
shrugged. “I didn’t know what to do with them, so I stuck them in the deep
freeze. I don’t use it anyway.”
“You’re keeping body parts in your
freezer?” Samantha laughed.
“I didn’t want them near food I was
actually going to eat.” DJ said by way of explanation.
“Sounds like something in one of those
books of yours.” Dave said, reminding the women he was still there. He was slowly reading through the notes,
feeling anger building inside him.
“You’ve read my books?” DJ asked,
surprise in her voice.
“You read?” Samantha said, almost at
the same time.
“Yes. And yes.” He shot a dark look at
Samantha, who was looking at him in mock awe.
“Wonders. Never. Cease.” She said
slowly. Dave rolled his eyes and turned
to DJ and smiled.
“All four of them. I wouldn’t miss ‘em.” He shuffled the
postcards in his hands then tossed them into the box. “Do you have any idea who would do this? Anyone you’ve dated
recently, worked with, pissed off?”
Samantha raised an eyebrow but said
nothing at Dave’s attempt to pry a bit into DJ’s private life. They had to know some of it.
“Nobody I can think of. I haven’t gone out in forever, I work alone
on my computer, and I don’t see enough people to piss them off. My publisher does get mad, and my agent, but
they’re in New York for Pete’s sake.”
“It was worth asking.” Dave shrugged
again.
“I don’t even see the mail man half
the time. I work all day writing. At night I watch movies. That’s pretty much it.” DJ sighed and leaned
back against the couch. “I don’t even
know my neighbors. I’m a bit
antisocial.” She seemed to want to explain it to Samantha. It was something Glen already knew.
“How about your acting days?” Dave
asked, pressing her.
“I was a nobody. Who the hell would remember that?” DJ
grimaced at the thought of it.
“You’d be surprised. There have been quite a few documented cases
of stalkers going after the strangest of celebrities. You’re a famous author
now.”
“Famous and with a pen name.” DJ said
dryly.
“Easy enough to figure out who it
is. I did.” He held up a hand before
Samantha could chip in a smart comment.
“That’s silly. Who would bother me over a couple of books?
They aren’t a reflection of who I am.
Just stories.”
“Seems to be someone is taking the
story just a little too far.” Dave rubbed his head. “DJ…you know this is not
what I usually deal with…”
“Fangs and dogs…” She said softly,
nodding.
“That’s right. So I’m not sure what exactly we’re gonna do
yet. Unless it is a fang or dog stalking you. I know how to deal with their
kind.”
“Well it can’t be a vampire. Whoever it is leaves the stuff right after
dawn. I tried keeping an eye out for
him, but he doesn’t come. It’s like he
knows when I’m watching and when I’m not.
He manages to sneak in a out before I know he’s here.” She shuddered
again at the thought.
“Dogs don’t like the light much
either.” Dave stated.
“Yeah, but in human form they can walk
in the sun.” Samantha spoke. She was
staring at the curtained window, thoughtful.
“I don’t see why a dog or fang would
go to such lengths. They usually just
take what they want. They don’t play
games.”
“Maybe this one is the exception.”
Samantha said, her voice still thoughtful.
“He thinks he’s something else.” DJ
finally spoke up.
“What else is there?” Dave asked,
reaching for her hand. DJ smiled at him
then reached for the box of postcards.
There was a folded up piece of paper amongst them. She carefully smoothed it out and handed it
to Dave.
Dave looked at the paper, a frown appearing on his features. “A demon?”
“Demon?” Samantha echoed the word with
surprised eyes.
“That’s from him. He sent it with the heart. It was underneath the…the heart.” DJ closed
her eyes. It was not just a postcard,
but a letter, the front of the paper filled with neat lines of red-tinged
print.
“Gimme…” Samantha held out her
hand. Dave gladly passed the paper over
to her and rubbed his hand on his jeans.
She glanced at the first words and snorted. “My love. Does he really
think this is the way to make you fall for him?”
“I don’t know what he thinks. Except
for what’s in that letter. He claims
he’s an incubus, and he wants to have a baby with me. The ‘gifts’ are his way of wooing me.”
Samantha skimmed the note and looked
thoughtfully at DJ. “Incubi do not kill.
At least, not in the normal legends. They usually just want to get
laid.”
“I know. I’ve done some research.”
“You don’t seriously think this guy is
possessed by a demon do you?” Dave asked, incredulous.
“No.” DJ hated to kill the relief the
flashed on his features. “I think he really is a demon.”
4
Dave decided that everyone was too
tired to think straight. DJ was falling
asleep on the couch. Samantha had gone
back to thoughtfully looking at the curtained window.
“I guess we could all use some rest.”
He told them. DJ smiled in relief.
“I think that I might actually be able
to sleep, now that you guys are here.” DJ admitted. “I hated being alone in this.”
“Well you’re not alone anymore.” Dave
returned her smile. “There are only two
bedrooms. I’ll take the couch.”
“No, no. I’ll take the couch.” Samantha said, waving off Dave’s
protest. “I won’t be able
to sleep for a while. New places freak me out a bit I guess. Besides, I want to call the kids.”
“Ok, ok.” Dave held up his hands. He helped DJ to her feet and followed her
out of the living room after saying good night to Samantha.
DJ stopped at her bedroom door and
looked up at him with a sad smile on her face.
“I don’t think I said this, but thank you for coming. You’re my hero.”
Dave grinned. “Yeah, well, I haven’t done anything yet.”
“But you will.” Her voice was
sure. “You always made me feel
safe. I guess that hasn’t changed.”
Dave shrugged and shifted on his feet,
but said nothing. He did not want to go
into a big talk about their past.
“If you get up first, come wake me
up. We’ll have to sit down and talk
about what we’re going to do.” Dave decided to go back to safer territory.
“Ok.” DJ sighed tiredly and ran her
hand through her hair, shaking it loose.
“I hope I don’t have nightmares.
It seems like every time I close my eyes, I have bad dreams.”
“Well you can come get me for that
too. I’ll talk you down.” Dave smiled
at her.
“Like the old days again.” DJ’s smile
was even sadder. He did not know how
that was possible. “David…”
“Good night, Deej. Try not to worry too much, we’re right here
in the house.” Dave did not let her finish what she had been going to say. He turned and went into the guest room,
closing the door behind him.
After Samantha made her phone calls,
she’d gone into the bathroom and changed. She was a little tired, and
attributed that to the trip. She
wouldn’t have a problem sleeping, she just wanted Dave and DJ out of her way in
case she decided to do some snooping around.
By nature she didn’t need much sleep, just a couple of hours here and
there.
Samantha stretched out on the couch,
tugging a blanket over her shoulders.
Like always, sleep came easy to her.
She’d never had a problem with nightmares or dreams. She was like a fang when it came to that.
She woke early in the afternoon,
stretched, and rose to her feet. The
house was silent. Dave and DJ were obviously
still sleeping. Samantha took a quick
shower and got dressed. She found the
key to the rental car and wrote a quick note, telling the others that she was
going to go explore town a bit and try to find a lead. They had to start
somewhere.
It had snowed sometime during the
day. There were a couple of inches of
the white stuff on the grass, but the road was mostly clear. Samantha steered the car over the pavement,
driving aimlessly, trying to get a feel for the small town that DJ called home.
It was strange…considering that there
was an army base and so many outlying homes, Samantha did not sense the
presence of any fangs. Usually she got
a tingling sensation at the back of her neck when there was one near. It did not mean they were problem fangs, it
just meant that they were there. Two hours of driving and she still had not
gotten even a small sense of a vampire.
In a town this size, with its army base so near and its countless strip clubs
of transient workers, there should have been at least one. And more likely five or eight. The fangs tended to go where the feeding was
easy. This bothered her, more than she
could put into words.
She stopped for food and gas at five
and resumed her slow study of the town.
It was starting to get dark. The
clubs were opening, the parking lots filling slowly with cars and trucks. Samantha picked one at random and pulled
into the lot.
Samantha went toward the door. There was a cover charge but the guy working
the door let her pass with a wave of his hand. They obviously did not get many women customers. The guy kept his eye on her as she
passed. Samantha grinned at him.
She took a table near the back of the
club, out of the way of general traffic.
There were twenty or so men seated at the tables surrounding the dance
stage. A woman was moving to the music,
her clothes seeming to melt from her body.
A waitress appeared and Samantha
ordered a beer. She had just taken her
first sip when her cell phone rang. She
glanced at the number that appeared and smiled.
“Hey baby.” She greeted warmly.
Glen chuckled into her ear. “Are you
guys doing all right? Sorry I missed you this morning, I had a few things to
deal with.”
“Yeah. Chris told me.” Samantha resettled the phone against her ear and
listened as Glen filled her in on what was going on at the house. Alex had pretty much stayed in his room all
day, which was worrisome. Samantha told
Glen not to get worked up. Alex had to
figure out his power on his own.
“So what are you doing?” Glen finally
asked with a laugh.
“I’m sitting here, watching some chick
flash her boobs at a bunch of horny farmers.”
“Seriously.” Glen was laughing still.
“I am serious. This place is like one giant strip
club. I’m trying to find a sympathetic
fang and all I get is T and A.” This
made Glen laugh harder.
“Need some backup? I can come up and
help you research.” He offered, still grinning.
“I think I can handle it, darlin’.”
She said wryly. “I didn’t know you were
into this kinda thing. Interesting.”
Glen was chuckling again. “What guy isn’t into that kinda thing?” He
asked rhetorically.
“Well, when I get home I’ll strip for
you. You should probably go ahead and
install a pole in the bedroom.”
“Don’t give me any ideas.” He was
still laughing when they hung up after saying they loved each other.
Samantha put her phone back into her
pocket and froze. That sense….the vampire thing…was suddenly working. She felt as if spiders were crawling on the
back of her neck. She glanced around
and let her eyes fall on a tall, well built man at the bar.
He was not drinking, he was buying a
drink for one of the dancers. Samantha
knew that without even talking to him. He looked to be in his late
thirties. Of course, being a fang he
could be a lot older. Samantha stared at him until he looked in her direction,
a slight frown on his face. She cocked
her eyebrow. He spoke briefly to the
woman beside him and ignored her protests as he abandoned his spot by the bar.
The fang slid into the booth across
from Samantha, a slight smile tilting the corners of his lips. “Hunters don’t make a habit of coming here.”
His voice was tinged with a drawling accent.
He didn’t look worried, just amused.
“Seems to me it’s the same for fangs.”
Samantha sipped her beer.
“Fangs don’t make it a habit to come
here.”
“Want to tell me why?” Samantha caught
his eyes with hers. The fang took a
deep breath and sighed it out.
“Outsiders would not understand.”
“Try me. I’m sure I’ve heard more
unbelievable things.”
The fang looked at her, as if measuring
her. “Some say this whole town is cursed.”
“A curse? And why is that stopping the
fangs from coming in and taking over?” Samantha finished her drink.
“There aren’t a whole lot of fangs in
the surrounding area anyway. This place
is out of the way, quiet. The people
are not necessarily the friendly type.”
“And this curse?”
“We’ve had a few disappearances.” The
fang stroked his hands together as if warming them.
“Tell me.”
“Young fangs, for the most part. Women.
Somebody turns these young girls and leaves them, they don’t know what
to do, they come here to work. Then they drop off the face of the planet.”
“You wouldn’t happen to know who is
doing it, now would you?”
“Don’t look at me. I don’t turn anybody, not after the first
time. It was hell, and I don’t like
that kind of responsibility.”
He sounded amused. Samantha was not. “Do you think it’s possible that some fang is turning them on
purpose, just to hunt them later?”
The fang shrugged. “Your guess is as good as mine. No one knows who is doing the turning.”
“So why exactly are you here?”
Samantha said, frowning a bit in concentration.
“I’m looking for my sister, if you
must know. She disappeared a few nights
ago after coming here to work.”
“Wait…she worked here?”
“Yes.
Undercover, so to speak. And she
vanished, just like the rest of them.
No one here cares-the girls that come and go are transient. They don’t leave forwarding addresses when
they leave. So no one is alarmed.”
“What about the police?”
The fang started laughing. “The police around here? There are only four
of them, which is amazing considering the army base. They’re a bunch of drunks.
I don’t think they’ve ever done any real police work. And I wouldn’t be
surprised if someone were paying them to fumble the ball.”
“Fuckin’ cops.” Samantha morosely
toyed with her empty glass. “So what do you think is happening to the girls?”
“Honest answer? I do not know. They
disappear, that’s the only thing I’m sure of.
Frannie would have called me if she couldn’t come home after work. She was a fang but she was afraid, you
see. She was never one to like crowds,
or strangers, so she’d call me or one of our brothers just talk say hello
during the night. I got one call. After that, she dropped off the face of the
planet.”
The fang was silent for a moment as
the waitress came with another beer for Samantha. After she was gone, he looked
to the woman across from him. “Do you know what is going on here?” He asked.
“I don’t have a damn clue. At least
not yet.” Samantha drank her beer, the studied the fang thoughtfully. “Do you know?”
He smiled. “I know that there is something here, something bad. I can smell it. I’m not worried about myself. I’m worried about them…” He
gestured at the stage where three women were now gyrating to the music.
“Are they fangs?”
“No.
Not at the moment.” He gave her a meaningful look. “The ones who turn…”
When he didn’t finish, Samantha
gestured at him with her glass. “I’ve
thought about it, you see. The ones he
turns, these girls, all have to use their body, their youth to make ends
meet. He’d offer them eternal beauty
because fangs don’t age. Most of these
girls would have a hard time resisting.”
“Great.” So maybe it was some psycho
fang they were dealing with. That made
Samantha feel better. “Thanks for the talk.” She threw some money on the table
and rose to her feet. The fang reached out and took her arm, stopping her from
walking away.
“You mean to stop him, right?” His
voice had gone low. His blue eyes caught hers.
Samantha nodded slowly.
“I mean to kill the fucker.” She gave
the fang’s hand a pat and he let her go.
“A hunter in action. It’s been a
while…” He said it with a smirk. “I’m
Steve. If you ever need help from a
fang, just look for me at the casino.”
“There’s a casino here?” Samantha
asked, remembering Dave saying something about an illegal one.
“Oh, yeah. You’ll have no problem
finding it.” Steve smiled again.
Samantha found herself smiling back.
“I’m Sammy. You have another girl disappear, you find me.” Now it was her
turn to catch his eyes. Steve nodded.
Samantha left him there in the bar and stepped into the frigid night
air.
It was time to get back to DJ’s
house. They needed to sit down and talk
about what they were going to do, get a plan.
With a sigh, feeling tired as if she’d never slept, Samantha turned the
car back toward the house.
5
He could not believe it.
The man stood in the trees, watching
the house. For the first time in days she had the curtains open, mindless of
the night that surrounded the house. He
could see her in there, sitting on the couch, talking to a stranger.
Not just a stranger, a man. After all he’d done for her, she was
entertaining someone else, probably giving the stranger credit for his
work. He began pacing, anger filling
his features, hands clenched at his sides.
Ungrateful bitch. That was what she was.
He suddenly stopped and stared in the
window at her, once again admiring her beauty.
He could not be mad at her, damn it, although he wanted to, although he
knew his rage needed a vent. He needed
something, some gift, that would prove his love for her.
A car was pulling into the
driveway. He stared as a woman got out
and climbed onto the porch. She stopped
and looked around. She seemed to be looking in the very spot he was
hiding. The man held perfectly still,
waiting her out. The woman finally
entered the house, slamming the door behind her.
He stood for a few more minutes,
confused, angry, sullen. He did not know what the hell she was up to, but he
was determined to find out. And God help those people if they stood in his
way. He would have her, they would not
stop him.
**
“And where have you been?” Dave asked
almost before Samantha could close the door.
“Out. Did you not read my note?” She
shook her coat off and hung it on the rack that was by the door. “I don’t ever want to see that much naked
woman again, I can tell you that.”
Dave started laughing. DJ looked confused. “Out bar-hopping? What would Glen think?”
“He wanted to know if he could come up
for a visit.” Samantha sank onto an overstuffed chair and sighed happily. “Any news?”
“Nothing. It’s quiet.” Dave studied DJ
for a moment. “We decided to open up
the curtains. If this guy is watching, we think having visitors will set him off.”
“Good idea.” Samantha stretched. “I
met a fang.”
“What?” DJ sat up straighter. She’d
heard of vampires of course, knew they existed, but had never seen one.
“Don’t worry, he’s not our guy. He was clean. Pretty refined for a fang.” Samantha said with a laugh.
“Did he know anything?” Dave asked
softly.
“Only as much as we do. Although I
think he was hinting that your body parts are coming from disappearing
strippers. One of them was his sister.
And…he thinks the strippers were all turned fang before they died.”
“So we are dealing with a fang.” Dave
said, looking meaningfully at DJ.
“Still can’t figure out how he goes
out in the daytime.” Samantha said, the frown of concentration on her face
again.
“Maybe he’s a dog.”
“Dogs can’t make fangs.” Samantha
reminded him.
“So he’s a fang that snapped. You know
what happens when they go over.” Dave reminded her, not wanting to bring up
Mark. He knew that Samantha had heard
the stories.
“It still doesn’t explain the daylight
thing.”
“Maybe he’s a hybrid. Like you and
Lily.” Dave refused to drop his opinion. Samantha sighed.
“Maybe. I doubt it.” She refused to
give in to his ideas. She wanted to keep her options open.
“He says he’s a demon.” DJ took
advantage of the lull in their conversation.
Dave gave her hand a reassuring pat.
“If he’s a fang and he’s gone crazy,
he could think he’s the president. We
don’t know.”
“I still say we shouldn’t be looking
for just a fang.” Samantha said. She
hesitated. “Although…”
“Yeah?” When she stopped, Dave looked
at her exasperated.
“I don’t know. When I got back here, I
could have sworn there was a fang nearby, watching. It was there and gone like that,” she snapped her fingers.
“Weird.”
“Very. But it supports that we’re
dealing with a fang. A crazy one, but a
fang anyway.” He squeezed DJ’s hand. “And I know a thing or two about taking
out a fang.”
“He’s not just a damn vampire.” DJ met
his eyes, then looked away, seeking commiseration from Samantha. In the other
woman, she found it. “He’s evil. More than
evil. I can’t explain it. You haven’t been living it for months, I have.”
“So let’s see what we have.” Samantha
sat up and spoke before Dave could begin arguing with DJ. “Girls turned fang.”
“That’s a vote for fang.” Dave said,
sounding smug. Samantha shot him a look.
“Dismemberment. That shrieks of dog.
They like to play with their victims.”
“Ok. So wolf gets a vote.” Dave
admitted. The smugness was gone.
“If the heart were really ripped out,
like DJ said, that would take a certain amount of insane power.”
“Fang again.”
“Daylight.”
“Damn it. Dog. Although they don’t
like it either.” Dave said sourly.
“In human form it doesn’t really
bother them,” Samantha reminded. They were silent for a minute, each thinking.
“So what the hell am I dealing with
here?” DJ finally asked, almost afraid to hear the answer.
“I hate to say it, but I don’t have
any idea.” Samantha’s voice was soft, apologetic. “Something new. That’s all I
can say for sure.”
“Can you stop it? Stop him?” Tears
rose in her eyes as she looked from Samantha to Dave. “I’ve written enough about serial killers to know that they
escalate. And it’s just a matter of
time before I’m the victim.”
“I’m not going to let that happen.”
Dave promised, staring into her eyes. “I’d die first.”
DJ laughed harshly. “I think it might
come down to that. You’re an obstacle now, one he won’t be able to just go
around. He probably already knows you’re here. He’s going to come after you
too, because you’re in the way of something he wants.” She took a shaky breath.
“I’m sorry I dragged you into this. I should have just let the cops do their
job…”
“All right, stop right there.”
Samantha had heard enough. “We know what we’re doing. If this guy wants to try
anything, we’ll deal with it. The cops aren’t going to do anything, and you
know that. We will. We can stop him. We just have to be patient, wait him out.
It’s his move, and I don’t think he’s going to wait long to take the next
step.”
“I just don’t want the next step to be
either one of you.” DJ said with a wry smile.
“Oh, if he fucks with us he’ll bite
off a bit more than he can chew.” Samantha said with a laugh. Dave was nodding
in agreement.
“You gotta understand, Deej. This is
what we live for. We like it when the chips are down and the odds are against
us.”
“It helps motivate.” Samantha said
with a grin.
“So this guy, whatever he is, doesn’t
stand a snowball’s chance in hell.”
“Well thanks for trying to make me
feel better.” DJ smiled up at him, a genuine smile that seemed to light up her
whole face. Dave felt his breath catch in his chest. She had a way of doing that to him, even after all this time.
Samantha cleared her throat, pulling
him back to the matter at hand. “This fang, Steve, said he’d help us.”
“You trust him?” Dave asked.
“I don’t know. I just met the guy.”
She shrugged. “He seemed all right. He was kinda hot.”
“Don’t tell me you’re going to start
judging the fangs on looks.” Dave said rolling his eyes.
“Gotta start somewhere.” Samantha rose
to her feet. “I hate waiting, damn it. Hopefully this guy will trip up, and
soon.” With that she left the room, heading into the kitchen.
DJ and Dave looked at each other, neither knowing what to say. DJ hoped that
Samantha was right, that they guy would do something foolish, that all this would
end sooner rather than later. She felt
as if she were falling apart. Dave seemed to sense her thoughts and pulled her
against him, offering her some comfort. For now it was enough, having him so
close, to help her forget briefly that she was in deep trouble.
**
He paced his barn, stopping every now
and then to admire one of his ‘collection’.
What was he doing wrong? Why couldn’t she see that he loved her?
Seething, he kicked at a woman’s arm
that was lying on the ground. It
thudded against the wall with a satisfying thump. He looked around, eyes wild. A body hung from a frayed rope
against the far wall. He went to it and
yanked, pulling it to the ground. With a cry of anger he began ripping at the
decayed flesh, taking comfort in the destruction he caused.
Fifteen minutes later, his anger faded
into a more manageable level. He was
disgusted with himself, with the mess he had caused. He’d ruined his display, his treasures. A smile curved his lips
as he thought of her. He’d just have to
start over. And what better place to
start than her auburn-haired houseguest that he’d seen last night? She was
quite pretty, lithe, slim. It did not
matter that she was not one of his usual victims. Perhaps that quality would be
what pulled her to him finally, once and for all.
The smile still playing on his lips,
he went into his house to plan for the next night. He’d give them one day, then
he’d take her friend, and decide what gift he’d make of her to his beloved. The
man she was entertaining could wait.
He’d deal with him when he was ready.
6
“That’s crazy and I’m not gonna let
you do it.”
Samantha was already pulling her coat
on. She stopped and shot Dave a withering glance. “Gosh Dad.” She cracked a
smile. Dave did not return it. It was a damn fool idea, and he couldn’t let her
leave. Glen would kill him if anything happened to Samantha, and more than
that, it would kill Glen if anything happened to her.
“You’re nuts. Stay here, we’ll
brainstorm.”
“I am not gonna sit and wait for
him. Look…” Samantha finished tugging
her coat on and looked from Dave to DJ, who had said nothing thus far. “He’s
obviously romantically obsessed. If I leave, he’s more likely to come around,
thinking you and DJ have something going on and I’m just watching.”
“In the meantime, you’ll be making a
target of yourself.” Dave grumbled.
“Maybe. Maybe not.” Samantha
shrugged. It was nearing dawn. They’d spent the night talking, discussing
possible plans. Dave hated to admit it
but Samantha was right. The guy would more likely be drawn out when he and DJ
were alone. He’d think he was protecting his property. “I’ll be fine. I’ll stay at a motel in town, scout the bars at night, see if
there are any more loose cannon fangs hiding out. We can meet up here, or out
on town a few times a day.”
“I can’t let you just go out there
alone.” DJ said finally. She was
shaking, scared to death. “What if he
decides we’re friends and he comes after you?”
“I can take care of myself.” Samantha
said wryly. Her fingers wrapped around the knife she carried in her coat
pocket. It wasn’t her usually, but it was wickedly sharp. She felt safer having it on her.
“Glen’s gonna shit twice then come up
here.” Dave said with no humor. “Which will put him in danger. Do you really
want that on your head?”
“Glen is going to stay home with the
kids and let us handle this our way. Trust me.” Samantha smiled. Glen would
have a bit of a freak out, sure, but he was smart. He’d realize they were doing
the right thing. Eventually. “I’ll call after I check in. And I’ll call Glen and make sure he knows
you are one hundred percent against this.”
“Damn straight you will.” Dave finally
cracked a smile. “I still say this is a bad idea.”
“Yeah, me too. But it’s the only one I
have right now. You kids have fun.” Samantha turned and left the house. DJ and Dave looked at each other.
“She’s going to get herself killed.”
DJ said softly.
“Nah. She’s too crazy to die.” There
was a bit of admiration in his voice.
“You like her.” It was not a question.
Dave laughed.
“Like I’d like a brain tumor.” He
looked at DJ, who was confused. “We pretend not to get along. It’s our thing.
She’s married to my best friend.”
“Oh.” It was soft. DJ smiled
shyly. “You guys fight like an old
married couple.”
“Shut up.” He said it with affection.
“I wouldn’t wish her on my best friend. Unfortunately he wished her on
himself.” With a laugh he led DJ toward the living room where they could sit
and talk for a while before heading to bed.
Samantha stopped at the first motel
she reached, just two miles from DJ’s house.
She accepted a key from the sleepy looking clerk and took her bags up to
her room. She would not get anything done before dawn, that was a given. She decided to call Glen before heading to
bed, to let him know what was going on.
It was well afternoon when Dave was
awakened by the soft squeak of the floorboards in his room. He sat up and peered through the murky
darkness, picking out DJ’s shadow from the general gloom.
“What’s wrong?” He came all the way
awake. DJ perched on the edge of the
bed, shoulders slumped.
“I told you…I have nightmares…” Her
voice was a whisper. Dave reached out and tugged her to him, taking her in his
arms.
“Wanna talk about it?”
“I don’t know…” She sighed. “I don’t
remember much. I’m in a dark place. Someone is after me. I feel myself dying…”
“Well I’m not gonna let that happen.”
Dave soothed her, rubbing her back.
“I know you won’t. I don’t deserve it,
but I know it.”
“What do you mean, you don’t deserve
it?” Dave asked, pulling away to look at her.
He could make out the contours of her face in the dark room, that was
it, no sign of the emotion she was feeling.
“You know what I mean. After I
practically threw you to the dogs, you come back as soon as I ask you to. I
don’t deserve any of that…kindness.”
“Believe me, it’s not just kindness.”
Dave said with a smile.
“Oh? Then it’s a call of duty I
suppose, just…”
Dave shushed her. “I still love you, you know.”
DJ was silent. He felt her shake a bit in his arms and hugged her closer.
“David..,”
“I’m an idiot, I know. I thought that
was all behind me. I thought I could come here and help you and that would be
it, but I can’t just ignore what I feel.” He stroked her hair. “I tried to move on, but couldn’t do it. I
hurt a couple of people, women, and for that I am sorry. They weren’t you. I
couldn’t give them more than what I had already given them.”
“I am so sorry. For what I did to you
back then. You can’t realize how sorry I am…” DJ said softly.
“It’s all right. You weren’t ready. I
was pushing you.” Dave nuzzled her hair, breathing in its clean smell.
“I got scared. You were my first
boyfriend, you know. My first…everything.”
“I remember.” Dave sighed and kissed
her head. “It’s not something I’m ever
likely to forget.”
“I fucked up, huh? Nothing was the
same after that. I pretended I was happy. I wasn’t. And now this…like some kind
of punishment for being stupid.”
“You are not stupid. I was the dumb
one. As usual. I wanted something, I had to have it, to hell with how you felt.
That’s the way I was.” He chuckled. “That’s the way I still am.”
“I never thought it was a bad
quality.” DJ said, smiling. “I wish I
could go back.”
“Don’t we all.”
“I would have said yes.”
Dave was stunned to hear it. He sat
there, holding her, eyes closed, feeling like he’d been hit by a ton of bricks.
“If I could change things, if I had
the power to change things, I would have said yes.” DJ repeated softly. “I
loved you. I think I might still love you. I think that’s probably why I hid
myself away here, away from people, from men, who might try to challenge my
feelings for you.”
Dave chuckled again. “I threw myself
into work. Oh, I had a couple of girlfriends over the years…although I would
never call them that. They chose not to stick around after a while. I just
didn’t want to go further than…what we were doing.”
DJ laughed. It was a beautiful sound
in the dark, lifting Dave’s heart a notch. “I’m not going to lie and say I was
a nun or something. I had a few dates
myself. I always pushed them away though. Probably not as aggressively as I
pushed you.”
“Deej…” Dave sighed. “We were always the most fucked up couple.”
“Beauty and the Beast.” She said with
a smile in her voice. That was the affectionate nickname they’d given each
other, although DJ always said Dave was the beauty part. “If we make it through
this…”
“We will.” Dave’s voice held a
certainty that made her feel warm.
“I don’t want to lose you again.” She
admitted as if he had not interrupted.
“Deej…” Again he said her name, his
voice a mix of emotions that hurt her heart to hear. She’d caused him so much
pain, she did not know if she’d ever be able to heal him.
“I don’t think I can lose you again.
I’ve never felt this way about anybody. It scares me.”
“You’re not the only one.” Dave felt
as if all their years apart were melting away. It was their last night together
all over again. It was bittersweet, heartbreaking. For the second time in his
life he felt like crying.
“I shouldn’t be dumping all this on
you now. Not when we could be killed by some crazed guy at any time.” DJ pulled
away from him and swiped at her eyes, rubbing away the moisture that had
gathered there.
“I love you, Diane.” Dave said it so
low she wasn’t sure she heard him.
“Even after what I did?”
“Probably even more after what you
did.” He said with a bit of humor. “There is nobody else I’d rather be with. I
always knew it. I thought I’d just have to accept it and go on alone.”
“I’m so sorry, David.” She sighed. “I
love you, too. I always have.” She
moved, meaning to stand. Dave grabbed
her hand and pulled her back down to him.
“I think maybe Samantha left us alone
so we could sort this out.” He said, grinning. “I don’t wanna waste the time
she’s given us. She’s a pain in the ass, but every now and then she has a decent
idea.”
DJ laughed shakily, resting her hand
on Dave’s bare chest. “I think I might
need a little time to sort out…”
“Nope. Not this time. I told you, I’m
used to getting my way.” Dave smiled and leaned forward, claiming her mouth
with his.
When they finally broke for air, DJ
was laughing a bit. “I always did have a weakness for giving you what you
wanted.”
“Umm…gonna prove it?” He asked
seductively. He pulled her down into
the bed, the years falling away once again, and joined with her as if he had
never left.
**
Night was falling.
Samantha had talked Glen out of coming and offering support, assuring him that
she’d be fine. She’d dealt with worse
on her own and at least in this case she had Dave as backup. She wasn’t about to underestimate their
adversary, but it was just one man.
Small fries to someone who had fought off a dozen fangs at one point in
her life.
She dressed carefully in black leather
pants and a blood red long sleeve t-shirt.
It was too cold to wear anything skimpy; if she was going to catch this
guy’s attention, she’d have to use something other than her body, that was for
sure.
Sure that Glen would not like that
line of thought, or that Samantha was trying to lure the killer to her, she
left the hotel and headed for the nearest bar that did not boast strippers as
its main form of entertainment.
She checked her pockets, making sure
she had her knife, cell phone and room key before entering the bar. She found a table and ordered a beer, not
really wanting it, just wanting the waitress to go away so she could think and
watch the crowd.
This being a weekday, the people in
the bar were older, working class types. A few were in conversation with each
other, but for the most part the only sound was the jukebox in the corner playing
old country songs at a volume just below deafening.
“We have got to stop meeting like
this.” The deep voice pulled her from her thoughts. Samantha looked up at Steve and watched as he sat down opposite
her.
“What are you doing here?” She asked,
taking a sip of her beer. “I thought you were trolling the booby bars, looking
for action.”
“I was. I had a weird feelin’ you’d be
in here, so I decided to check it out.”
“Are you stalking me now?” Samantha
eyed him speculatively. Although it was
possible they were looking for a fang, she had a feeling that Steve was not it.
He seemed stable, especially for a vampire.
As if he’d made peace with what he was and enjoyed the benefits
immensely.
“I wouldn’t dream of it. But having a
hunter here, now, kinda makes me wanna go where the action is. That would be
where you are.” He took her beer and sipped it, keeping his eyes on hers.
“An alcoholic fang. How precious.”
Steve laughed. “I like the taste. The
alcohol doesn’t do anything for me. So have you found anything?”
“Yeah. The motel I’m staying at
doesn’t have cable.”
“Cute.” Steve offered a lopsided
smile.
“Yeah, you are. What’s a nice fang
like you doing in a town like this?”
“I told you. I’m looking for my
sister.” He shrugged.
“Any luck?”
“About as much as you’re having
apparently. Nobody talks in this town. It’s like pulling teeth. And believe me
I’ve been tempted to do just that a time or two. Torture just isn’t my thing
though.”
“Oh, and what is your thing?” Samantha
decided to bit at his suggestive tone.
“Enchantment usually. It doesn’t seem
to be working with you though.”
Samantha laughed. “It usually doesn’t
on married women.”
“Damn. I knew it.” He grinned
boyishly. “How married?”
“Extremely married.” She took her beer
back and finished it. “Better luck next time.”
“It was worth a shot.” With that he
rose to his feet. “I’m meeting a friend. He was supposed to talk to someone for
me today. I’ll see ya around.”
“Don’t be a stranger.” Samantha called
after him, smiling. Steve waved over his shoulder but did not turn around.
With a sigh she paid for her beer and
stood to leave. Outside it was even colder than earlier. Snowflakes were drifting down. Samantha decided to walk for a while, to
clear the cobwebs that seemed to cloud her mind. That was what a couple of years of being out of commission did.
There were no people out, and why
would there be? It was cold, it was dark, and it was the deadest town Samantha
had ever seen. There were four blocks of dark businesses separating her from the
next bar on her list. She began walking
in that direction.
Her breath puffed out in little
clouds. It was strange how quiet the town was, even at night. There wasn’t even
a dog barking. She had time to contemplate Steve, who seemed to be the only fang
within miles. It was very strange. The fangs obviously knew something was up,
but they were being as close-mouthed as the townspeople.
Samantha was lost in thought when
rough hands grabbed her from behind and dragged her backward into a small alley
that she had not noticed. Too surprised
to cry out, she started struggling against the arms that were around her.
The unknown assailant grabbed her hair
and slammed her face first into the wall of the building in front of them. Samantha saw stars and felt her knees
buckling. With all the strength she
could must she lifted her feet and pushed against the wall, knocking her
attacker back, falling on top of him on the ground.
He was quick to recover. She felt him wriggling under her, turning too fast for
her to react. That knock to the head was slowing down her reflexes, scaring
her. The man was on top of her, rolling
her over. Samantha tried to see his face but the lights from the street did not
penetrate the alley.
She felt hot breath on her as hands latched around her neck. She bucked against
the weight holding her down, summoning all the energy she had left.
The guy went flying. She hadn’t thought
she’d been able to get him off of her.
And then she realized that someone else was in the alley. A large shadow moved after the attacker,
chasing him to the far end before turning back to Samantha.
“Are you all right?”
Steve’s drawl was the most welcome sound she’d heard in ages. Samantha struggled to her feet, shaking her
head, trying to rid herself of the pain.
“I’m good. What the fuck?” She gasped
out, feeling pain in her throat. The guy who attacked had been surprisingly
strong. She rubbed her neck and
swallowed a few times experimentally.
“I don’t know. I heard noises, I
looked, I helped.” Steve took her hand and pulled her toward the street where
there was light. “You look like hell. I
guess he caught you unaware.”
“I was stupid. Wasn’t paying
attention.” Her voice was scratchy.
“It’s easy to forget around here. It’s
too damn quiet.” Steve said, patting her shoulder.
“Did you see him?”
“Kinda. He had something over his
face. Dark hair. Dark eyes. That’s all I got. About my size.” He shrugged. “I
could run after him, but he was quick. Fang quick.”
“I know. And fang strong.” Samantha
settled her jacket around her.
“You want an escort back to your
motel?”
“Like I need a fang to protect me.”
Samantha tried huffing but it hurt.
“So are you saying I shoulda let him
choke you to death?” Steve said with a grin, falling into step beside her.
“I woulda kicked his ass.”
“I don’t doubt that a bit.” Steve
chuckled and led her through the falling snow to her room. Samantha thanked him at the door and watched
him walk away. Strange. She still didn’t
know if she trusted him. Sure he’d helped her but it was passing weird how he’d
been in the right place at the right time.
With a sigh she glanced in the mirror
at herself. She had red marks around
her neck and a bruise forming on her forehead. “You should see the other guy,”
She said, her voice a croak. She sighed
again and grabbed her car keys, meaning to head to DJ’s house to talk to Dave
about what had transpired. Things were going to happen quicker than either of
them had thought.
7
She’d barely driven two miles when her
cell phone started to ring.
Samantha took her eyes off the snow
drifted road for a moment and snagged the contraption from her pocket. She
didn’t bother looking at the caller ID.
She had a pretty good idea who it was.
“Hello.”
“Sammy, are you all right?”
Glen’s voice was dripping with
worry. Samantha smiled a bit.
“I’m fine. What’s wrong, do you miss
me?”
“You sound weird. What’s wrong with
your voice?” Glen refused to be joked with. Samantha tried to clear her throat,
but it still ached. It would heal and be good as new in a day, but right now
she was going to have to suffer.
“I had a little scuffle. I’m fine.”
She repeated. Glen heaved a sigh.
“Alex woke up screaming, crying. He
said you were hurt.” Glen’s voice was still concerned although some of the
alarm had drained from it.
“Well I’m not.” Besides the headache
and sore throat, she added in her mind.
“He kept saying he wanted water
because his throat was hurting. And his
head. He asked for aspirin, and he choked on them because of his throat.”
“Glen…seriously, I’m good. Like I
said, I had a scuffle but I’m all right.” She swallowed, trying to work through
the hoarseness. “Put Alex on the phone. Let me talk to him.”
Glen muttered and Samantha heard
voices. Her son whispered a soft
‘hello’ making her grin.
“Hey, baby doll. I heard you had a bad
dream.”
“It wasn’t a dream.” His voice was
still soft. She got the feeling he did
not want anyone to overhear. “Mom, are you all right? Did the bad man hurt
you?”
“Baby, I am fine. A little bumped and
bruised. Don’t worry. I’m gonna take care of him.”
“Good.” The boy’s voice was filled
with relief. “He’s angry…” There was a
pause and Alex’s voice dipped lower. “Really pissed off.” He waited to be
yelled at for the rough language. When Samantha didn’t correct him, he went on.
“And he’s cold. Cold and angry, not
warm and angry like when you argue with Uncle Dave.”
That made Samantha laugh, and she was
immediately sorry. “Kiddo, thanks for
the information.”
“Did it help?” Alex’s voice was back
up to its normal level.
“Bunches. Sweetheart, from now on when
you start getting those crazy things coming at you, I want you to do me a
favor.”
“Sure, Mom.”
“I want you to try to block them out.
Think of something else, anything. A
song. Just run the words of the song
through your head over and over. It’ll
make it not so scary.”
“I’ll try.” He did not sound convinced
it would work. Samantha smiled.
“I love ya, baby. Now you go back to
bed and give your Daddy the phone. I’ll be home before you know it.”
There were more noises and Glen came
back on the line, sounding much more relaxed now that Alex had calmed
down. “I don’t know how you do that.”
“I have a mother’s touch, that’s all.”
“I do miss you.”
“I know you do. I’ll be home soon
though.”
“How soon?”
“That remains to be seen, love. Now
let me get on with driving. It’s snowing and the road is a little slippery.”
“Be careful, babe. I love you.” Glen
hung up, leaving Samantha to drive on in the dark.
She finally pulled into DJ’s driveway
and stopped the car. The snow was
coming down harder now. She rushed to
the porch and went through the door, frowning. It should have been locked.
“Hey! Anybody home?” Samantha’s hand
was in her jacket pocket, touching her knife.
“Yeah, we’re in here!” Dave’s voice
called from the living room. Sighing, she locked the door and followed the
sound of laughter.
DJ was watching Dave try to start a
fire. She was still in her robe. Dave was wearing a pair of jeans and nothing
else.
“My, my, my. Am I interrupting
something?” Samantha said, her voice scratchy. Dave looked up at her, his smile
dying.
“What the hell happened to you?” He
was up and standing in front of her before she registered the movement. He took
Samantha’s chin in his hand and turned her head, studying the abraded flesh on
her forehead and neck.
“Had a close encounter with a wall.
I’m all right.”
“I’m calling Glen.”
“I already talked to him.” Samantha
smacked Dave’s hands away and shrugged her coat off. “The door was open.”
“I know. I left it open. I was hoping
the asshole would be bold enough to walk right in.” Dave grinned.
“Nice. Too bad he was busy in town
trying to kill me. And he hasn’t even met me yet.” There was humor in her
voice.
“I’m so sorry, about all of this.” DJ
said, tightening her robe. “If I hadn’t called, you wouldn’t have gotten hurt.”
“Nonsense.” Samantha waved her hand.
“Shit happens. I’ll get over quick enough. I did have another encounter with
our friendly vampire though.” Samantha
quickly ran through the events, not editing anything out.
“Kinda weird, him being there when you
needed him.” Dave said thoughtfully, wrapping an arm absently around DJ’s
shoulders.
“You don’t have to tell me. I was
there, I know.”
“You think he’s going to be trouble?”
DJ asked, snuggling against Dave’s side.
Samantha shook her head at the display.
“I don’t know yet. He’s not being
totally straight with me. I don’t like it. I might have to let Mister Knife
have a word with him.” She laughed. It was a strange sound with her voice not
working right.
“You’re not going to hurt him are
you?” DJ asked, eyes wide. “I mean, he did save you. Even if he’s got an
ulterior motive.”
“I was kidding.” Samantha rubbed her
throat. “I need a drink of water. I feel like I’m still choking.” With that she
rose to her feet and headed for the kitchen.
Dave waited until he heard water running before leaning forward and
snatching his cell phone from the table.
“What are you doing?” DJ asked,
running a hand through her hair.
“Calling Glen.”
“She said she called him.”
“I know. I also know her, and knowing
her means knowing that she probably failed to mention some of the details.”
Dave dialed Glen’s number. He answered
on the first ring. Obviously he could not sleep and something was worrying him.
Dave recapped everything that Samantha had told him, and waiting while Glen
processed the information.
“If that fang touches her, I’ll kill
him.” He was referring to Steve, Dave knew.
He smiled.
“I think the fang is the least of your
worries. Some hopped up thing tried to kill her tonight. I don’t think he’s
gonna want to leave it unfinished.”
“I’m coming up there.”
“Good. Glad to have you.”
“Don’t tell her unless you absolutely
have to.” Glen instructed. “I have to call Mark, see if Christine can take the
kids. I can be there in…” There was a short silence. “Six hours or so. If I
hurry I can get the last flight.”
“I’ll pick you up.”
“No, I’ll rent a car. Better we have
two.” Glen said goodbye and hung up before Dave could reply.
“Her real knight in shining armor is
on the way.” He said softly to DJ, who had listened to Dave’s side of the
conversation in silence.
“She’s gonna be mad, huh?” DJ asked,
trying not to look at the open windows. It made her nervous, not being able to
see out into the night.
“She’ll get over it.” Dave kissed the
top of DJ’s head. “Besides, we can use the help. There’s something you should
know about Sammy…”
“Why are you talkin’ about me?”
Samantha reentered the room in time to catch her name.
“I was just going to give Deej here a
bedtime story. Even though we’ll be up all night.” Dave smiled and looked down
at DJ. “Sammy here is part fang.”
“What?” DJ sat up and stared at the
other woman.
“I’m the best part.” Samantha said
sweetly.
“Born of vampire parents. So she has
some of their traits, including their strength. So if that thing tonight
managed to overpower her…”
“He caught me unawares. There’s a
difference.”
Dave went on as if she had not spoken.
“Then he’d probably make mince meat of me. Much as I hate to admit it. I’m just
a regular old human.”
“This is sadly the truth.” Samantha
said, her tone very serious. Then she laughed. Her voice sounded better after
drinking some water, but she still felt as if she had to cough. “It won’t
happen again. Guaranteed. He’s a sneaky fuck but I can be sneakier. It’s how I
survive.”
DJ laughed at that. Dave just rolled his eyes. He looked down at
her, trying to convey with his eyes that she could not say anything about Glen
coming. DJ nodded imperceptibly. Unfortunately, Samantha was not born yesterday.
She noticed the gesture and narrowed her eyes.
“You guys are plotting anything
retarded are you? Because I have been known to kick a team member’s ass from
time to time.”
“No, no. Just sharing some afterglow.”
Dave said with a smirk. Samantha made a
face.
“Gross. Just…spare me the details. I
don’t wanna know.” She sighed. “I told you people I make a terrible babysitter.
Now maybe you’ll start listening.” Dave laughed. DJ gave him a confused frown.
He began explaining that Samantha’s main job for the last few years had been
motherhood, and she felt like an unpaid babysitter most of the time. Not only
to the kids, but to the hunters who called the house home base. Then he told DJ of Samantha’s comment in the
car about being the mediator between them.
DJ had a good laugh. It was the first time in a long time she had been
tempted to do it.
**
He stood in the shadows, watching the
house. He’d almost had her, had felt her blood throbbing in her veins as his
hands tightened around her neck. And then that damn fang had come along and
ruined everything.
He’d had a hunch that Auburn would
come back to this house. He’d been
waiting for an hour when she finally made an appearance. Now she stood in the
living room, waving her arms, telling some story or other by the look of
amusement on the faces of the man and the woman that he loved.
And they were sitting on the couch.
Cuddling. That should be him in there, not that dark haired man. She was his damn it. She’d been his for a
long time. They looked just a little
too comfortable with each other. And
they were hardly dressed. It did not take him much to put two and two together.
He began balling his hands into fists as he watched the three people talk into
the night.
A movement to his right brought him
out of his rage. He looked, at first
not seeing the man, but then his eyes found him amongst the shadows. The fang from earlier in the night. The one
who had stopped him. He was looking at
the house thoughtfully, standing just beyond the trees as if he didn’t care if
he were seen.
He could take the fang out. He had not been seen. But he was curious as
to why this fang would want to help these people. The dark man and Auburn were
hunters, vampire killers. It was not something he knew, but something he could
smell on them. He’d run into their kind a few times before, but had managed to
get out unscathed.
And this fang was not bothered in the
least that there were two people within shouting distance that would kill him
as soon as look at him. Interesting.
Very interesting.
He stood silent as the fang seemed to
melt back into the trees, disappearing with no sound on the snow padded ground.
He waited until he was sure the fang was gone before giving the house one last
lingering glance. A change in plan was in order. Auburn would not be caught out
twice so easily. He would have to do something to draw her away from the
others. And he would have to do it soon.
He could not wait any longer to have his woman. He’d waited long enough.
Perhaps it was time to send her
another message. He smiled at the thought, already planning out the next night
in his head. He'd have one more lowly girl, then Auburn, then the prize would
be his. He rubbed his hands expectantly. After losing his chance with Auburn,
he relished the thought of an easier target. For practice. Still smiling
coldly, he moved away from the house toward home.
8
“And what exactly are you doing here?
I told you I was fine!”
Samantha was standing in the doorway
of her motel room, looking at Glen as if she were going to rip his head off.
“You look fine, all right.” His voice
was laced with sarcasm. It made her smile. Glen reached out and grabbed her
chin, turning it to get a better look at the bruising on her head and throat.
“I’ll kill the fucker myself for this.”
“Oh. You.” Samantha playfully punched
him in the stomach. Glen was not going to be easily joked out of his
anger. He moved past her into the room
and dropped his bag on the floor. “So I suppose Dave ratted me out. Remind me
to thank him later.”
“You think this is funny?”
“No, what I think is funny is now
instead of just me in trouble, it’s going to be the both of us. Good thing Mark
and Chris agreed to be the godparents.” Her tone was still wry. She did find it
funny actually. She was having a good time, almost getting killed included. It
had been a long time.
Glen heaved a sigh and studied her
again, this time keeping his distance. “And I though marrying a hunter would
make the relationship easier.”
“Well it would not be the first time
you’ve been wrong.” Samantha laughed at the sour look on his face. “Have you
traveled all night?”
“The better part of it.”
“You don’t waste time, I know.” She
grinned. “I was getting ready to watch a movie and pass out, but since you’re
here, I suppose I can find a better way to wind down.” She winked.
Glen fought a smile. “I’m still mad about this, Sam.”
“Be mad later…” She stepped into his
arms and kissed him on the neck. For a
while all problems and arguments were erased in the storm of their passion.
**
He found his next victim by chance.
He had not meant to go into any of the
bars, solely so that he would not be tempted to rush himself. He could not
resist though. He was always weak when it came to beautiful women, and this was
no exception.
She was on stage right now. Jet black hair that almost looked blue in the
light. Pale, flawless skin. Her eyes were dark, looking almost black in
the club. He chanced a closer look,
moving toward the stage. Dark blue, like the deep fathoms of the night sky. She
was smiling as she danced, her lithe young body moving to the music. The men in
the club could not take their eyes off of her.
She would be his. He’d treasure her perfection as the newest addition to
his macabre collection, but more importantly, her eyes.
He would send those dark blue orbs to
the one he really loved, as a way of showing that his eyes were indeed only for
her, that these other women were just passing fancies. She would understand
this time. How could she not know how he felt after gazing into eyes the color
of a limitless night sky?
He forced himself to leave before he
could even begin to get impatient. The next night was plenty soon enough. Of
course, thinking of the dark goddess on stage was not going to make it go by
any quicker. He paused at the door and looked speculatively at the bouncer, a
young man who seemed more interested in staring at his tattoos than at all the
bare flesh the club exposed. He worked
a bit of his magic. He asked the name
of the girl currently performing. Getting his information, he erased all memory
from the bouncer’s mind. He would not recall anything that had just transpired.
It was a useful trick, but very taxing on this human body of his.
“Jesselyn.” Her name was a murmur on
his lips. He had never bothered learning the names of the other girls, but they
had been nothing in comparison to this one.
And she was nothing in comparison to the one he really wanted. Too bad he’d have to wait an extra night.
First Jesselyn, then Auburn, then Diane. His Diane. He smiled thinking about
her, already mapping in his head the events that were soon to transpire.
**
Someone was knocking on the door.
Night had just fallen. Glen and
Samantha had called a truce and had shown up at DJ’s house in good spirits.
They were eating when the pounding started.
“I’ll be back…” DJ had no more than
shifted in her seat when Dave was grabbing her arm.
“I’ll get it. You don’t need to be
going to the door.” He scolded, a frown on his face.
“I’ll get it. Damn.” Samantha was up
before anyone else could speak. Glen
shook his head and rose to follow her, still not wanting to leave her alone
after what had happened.
Samantha threw the door open, hoping
to surprise whoever was knocking. They would expect caution.
Steve stood there, the appropriate wide-eyed look on his face. Samantha grinned at him and leaned against
the doorframe.
“Takes a damn brave fang to wander
into the hornet’s nest. What are you doing here? And an ever better question
is…how did you know where I was?”
“I tried to motel first. Then I…”
Steve shuffled his feet, looking positively bashful. “Ok, truthfully, I
followed you last night, just to make sure you were all right.” His eyes fell
on Glen who was walking toward the door. He gave the taller man a measured look,
then turned his attention back to Samantha. “Something’s happening. I can’t
explain how I know, or why I know, but you have to believe me.”
“What do you mean, you can’t explain?”
Samantha asked. She was already reaching for her coat.
“Look, sometimes I just know things.
And right now is one of those times. We have until midnight, maybe, but I’d
just as soon go there now and scope things out. I just thought you would want
to know since we seem to be after the same thing here.” Steve stared at her,
his clear eyes showing no sign of deception. Samantha was not one to question
her instincts about a person. Or in this case a vampire. So she’d trust him a
little, see where it went.
“All right, let’s go.”
“Wait up.” Glen was tugging his coat
on. Steve shot him another look.
“Steve, my husband Glen. Glen, this is
Steve, a relatively normal fang.” Samantha introduced them as she checked her
pockets for her necessities.
“Hi.” Glen offered a wave. Steve was
smiling.
“Relatively normal, huh? You obviously
don’t know me very well.”
“Well. I try. The hubs came running
when I told him you were tryin’ to seduce me.” Samantha deadpanned it. Glen was frowning at her, then at Steve. She
started laughing. “I’m kidding. Calm down Glen, you’re going to have a heart
attack before we ever leave the house.”
“I am calm.” For a second there he had
been worried. He was silly to be, and he knew it, but he could not help it. “I
need to tell Dave where we’re going. Do NOT leave without me. I mean it,
Sammy.” With that Glen turned on his heel and walked back toward the kitchen.
“He seems to think you’re going to run
off.” Steve observed, amused.
“Yeah well, I do have a habit of doing
such things.” Samantha pulled the knife from her pocket and flicked it open.
“That thing actually good protection
from a fang?” Steve did not sound impressed.
“Wanna find out the hard way?” With a
practiced flip of her wrist, the knife folded into itself. Steve laughed again
as Glen rejoined them.
“Did I miss something amusing?” He
zipped his coat. Glen’s eyes caught the glint of Samantha’s knife as she tucked
it back into her pocket. “Threatening him, huh?” He was smiling. Samantha
tucked her hand into his as they left the house.
“You know me too well. I need to shake
things up a bit. Maybe I should start carrying a gun.”
“You’ll get no argument from me.” Glen
kissed her forehead, mindful of the bruise that still colored it. “Where
exactly are we going?”
“A bar downtown, called The Bar.”
Steve looked at them. “I’m not kidding. When original names were handed out,
this place was last in line.”
“And why are we going there?” Samantha
said with a laugh.
“Because he’s going to attack someone
there tonight. I want to stop him. If I can.”
His tone was dead serious. Glen and
Samantha exchanged a look.
“Steve…how the hell could you know
that?” Samantha asked as they climbed into Glen’s rental car.
Steve settled into the backseat and
ran a hand over his face. “Look, when I was kid I had these prophetic dreams.
Most ended up coming true. When I turned fang it was like putting an amplifier
on it, cranking it to eleven. So tonight as I was walking around, I just
happened to go past this place. And I got pissed off. So angry I couldn’t see
straight. And I saw in my head that something was going to go down in that
place. Not in, but near. It was dark. That’s all I know for sure. There was
pain.”
His voice faded to a whisper then stopped altogether. Samantha turned to look
at him, then shared a glance with Glen. “Are you still feeling anything from
him? It? Them? Whatever it is you’re pulling from?”
Her stumbling for words did not even
get a smile. “A little. It’s not so bad.” He was quiet for a minute then raised
his head. “I told you I followed you last night.” It was not a question.
Samantha nodded her head. Glen remained silent. That was news to him.
“I felt the same thing when I was
looking at the house you were in. Everything was red, like it was soaked in
blood. Like I was looking out through blood. If you don’t mind, I’m going to
take that as a bad omen.” Some of the humor returned to his voice. “So what do
you think?”
“I think we’re probably going to need
a hell of a lot more than my knife.” Samantha said wryly. “I also think we need
to hurry. We have to stop this guy. Now.”
9
She was dancing.
Her body was like water, like a river,
flowing with the beat of the music. He admired her from his booth in the
corner, watched as she slowly took her clothes off. Jesselyn. Just thinking her name was enough to arouse him to new
levels. He wanted her. It was too early
though, much too early. Not yet midnight. Not everyone here was drunk enough
for him to get away with leading the woman outside.
And something else was bothering him
too. That damn fang, the one he’d seen at Diane’s house, was here. He moved
through the crowd with as much grace as the goddess on the stage, his eyes
piercing the crowd as if searching for something.
As long as he stayed on that side of
the bar, that was all right. He’d deal with the fang if the fang needed to be
dealt with.
The song came to a resounding end. The
crowd gave Jesselyn a standing ovation. She seemed to bask in their attention,
and he could see a golden glow around her taut young body.
It was time. Fang or not, vampire or
not, he wanted her. Now.
She was on the other side of the
stage, in conversation with people he could not see. He did not care. When she
turned her eyes immediately fell on him. He smiled as a slightly vacant look
came into her dark eyes.
Too easy sometimes, this enchantment
thing. He so enjoyed the power he had though.
Jesselyn was coming him way, ignoring
all those around her. She stopped
inches from his table. He got a good look at her. She was wearing nothing but a
pair of lacy boy-cut panties. Her skin was lightly glistening with sweat. He
studied her up and down, from the fall of raven’s wing black hair, to the high
breasts, the flat stomach, down her endless legs to the spike heeled shoes she
was wearing.
Rising to his feet, he offered his hand. Jesselyn took it, very willing to go
wherever he would lead her. And right now he wanted to go to the alley, the
very same alley he’d used on numerous other occasions.
**
“It’s gotta be her.”
Steve had walked through the crowd,
keeping his senses open. He felt sick to his stomach. There was something here,
something evil, but he could not pinpoint its location or cause.
The girl on the stage caught his
attention. He watched her dance for a few minutes. Usually the strippers were
under his radar-some were quite pretty, and some were good for a quick feed if
need be. This one was different. He did not know how he knew, but he did.
She caught his eye and cocked an
eyebrow in his direction. Steve gave her a half-smile. She tilted her head to
the side and then back, then forward. Even without words he caught her meaning.
Sit. Wait.
He went to the corner table that
Samantha and Glen were seated at. Samantha was sipping a water, Glen a beer.
Steve made his announcement and waited to see what they thought.
“Probably is. She’s the headliner, if
there is such a thing at this kind of place.” Samantha toyed with her glass.
“There is, and she is.” Glen had
looked briefly at the woman but spent most of the time studying his wife.
“How would you know about strippers
baby?” Samantha laughed and gave him a sly look.
“I read books.” That was all he was
going to admit. He was grinning. “And yes, I think she’s the one. We need to
get her attention.”
“I think we already did.” Steve said
as the song came to an end. He slid into the booth next to Samantha and watched
as the dancer made her way slowly through the crowd.
She stopped at the table, mindless of
her undressed body, and looked from Steve to Glen to Samantha. “I think we’re
all here for the same reason, so let’s not waste time on explanations right
now. He wants me, I can feel it. When he takes me, I want you all to get him.
Understood?” Her seductive voice carried a note of command in it. Samantha felt
Glen’s hand on hers, squeezing, urging her not to argue. “I’m Jess. Or Jesse. Do not call me
Jesselyn. That’s a dancer’s name. And after this I am no longer going to be a
dancer.” With that she turned her attention to the other side of the room as if
someone called her by name.
Before they could say anything she was
moving through the crowd, her body moving with the fluid grace of a cat. To another booth on the other side of the
stage.
“Fuck me runnin’.” Steve’s drawl was
more pronounced when he got a look at the man who had captured Jesse’s
attention.
“What, do you know who he is?” Samantha
squinted in the barely lit club. She could see him, barely. The only real
defining feature he had was his blonde hair. So blonde it was almost white.
The man stood and began to lead Jesse
away. Steve rose to his feet. “I don’t fuckin’ believe this!”
“What?” Glen gripped the other man’s
shoulder before he could take off through the crowd. Time was short, but he
sensed this would be important. “Who is he?”
“A fang. His name is…was…Kennedy.”
Steven looked at Samantha and shook Glen’s hand away. “He was killed last
year.”
“Killed? Obviously not.” Samantha
couldn’t help but be sarcastic.
“I killed him. I had to. He went wild
the last few months he was with our group. We couldn’t control him. We had to
take him out before he brought hunters down on all of us.”
“Went wild?” Glen asked, falling into
step beside Steve. Samantha led the way through the crowd. They seemed to part
easily enough.
“He had a thing for women. Not willing
women, either.” Steve sighed in aggravation. “We didn’t know when we found him.
Somebody turned him. He tried to rape a fang and got turned for his trouble. He
hid it for a while, then went nuts one night and killed a few of our own.”
“Women?”
“Women he had fixated on. I knew this
whole setup was familiar. I knew it but I couldn’t believe it.” They came to
the short hallway that led to the restrooms. Samantha pulled her knife out,
flicking it open once again, the business end looking dangerous in the dim
light. “He can’t be alive. He can’t be.”
“Maybe you just thought you killed him.
Fangs are fuckin’ resilient.” Glen muttered, testing a door at the end of the
hall. It opened into a storeroom. There was another door. They moved toward it.
“There wasn’t any thinking to it. I
snapped his neck. Then twisted it off.” He said it as if it were no big
deal. To a fang, it wasn’t. “Fucker was after my sister. I had to do
something.”
“And you did. Now wanna take a guess
at how the hell he came back?” Samantha pushed on the door. It opened silently
into a dark alleyway at the back of the building.
“I know only one way…” Steve did not
get to finish the thought. There were sounds from the end of the alley. They could see two shadows struggling in the
meager light from the street.
Without thinking, Samantha ran
forward, ignoring Glen’s hand at her shoulder, trying to stop her. This asshole had tried to kill her, now she
was going to return the favor. The man had Jesse pushed against the wall and
everything around him was lost on him as he nipped at the skin of her neck.
Jesse looked amazingly calm. That was
all that registered with Samantha before she leaped at the attacker, her knife
flashing. She sunk it into his back to
the hilt and twisted it.
The man lurched backward, knocking
Samantha off her feet as he became aware of what was happening around him. Samantha had managed to pull her knife out
while she was falling. It was still gripped in her hand. He took a menacing
step forward.
Samantha sprung to her feet. And
almost fell down again as Glen and Steve rushed the bastard, knocking him back
again. Seeing he was outnumbered, not liking the odds, the man turned and ran
toward the street, going faster than he had any right to be going.
Glen and Steve gave chase, leaving the
two women in the alley. Their footsteps
faded into the night. Samantha leaned
down to catch her breath.
“That as close.” She finally said,
standing straight.
“I won’t be able to get him to attack
me again. I should have just taken him out when I had the chance.” Jesse’s
smoky voice sounded petulant. Samantha looked at her, eyebrow up. She flipped
her knife, that well practiced trick, but nothing happened.
Looking down, she saw the blade was
twisted into a lump, the metal a rough shape in the dark. “What the fuck?”
“Might as well toss it. It won’t do
any good against him anyway.” Jesse crossed her hands over her chest, not to
cover up her nakedness, just to have something to do with them.
“How the hell do you know?” Samantha
was starting to feel a little frumpy in comparison to the perfect female body
before her. She realized something even as the thought formed. Jesse was not
cold. She was not shivering. She did not even appear to be slightly shaken by
almost getting raped and murdered. Samantha eyed her curiously, all sarcasm
gone from her voice. “Who are you?”
“I’m the one who can stop him.” Jesse
stated simply. She smiled. Samantha felt as if the alleyway were suddenly lit
up with neon. “We need to get your friends and find a safe house so I can
explain. Then we need to go hunting. This time we have to take him out. If he
gets to Diane, we’re really in trouble.”
Samantha could do nothing else but follow as the mostly naked Jesse led the way
out of the alley. This damn situation got stranger the longer she was involved
in it. Shaking her head, she tossed her beloved knife down on the street,
mourning its loss as if she would a friend. Apparently Jesse had more answers
than any of them had come up with. And hopefully the time had come to find out
what was really going on.
10
They made one stop on the way to DJ’s
to pick up Samantha and Glen’s bags from the motel. No one spoke on the drive.
Glen offered Jesse a shirt. She took it with a sigh. Samantha got the feeling
that she put it on more out of respect for her company than out of any kind of
shyness.
Kennedy had gotten away. Steve and
Glen had been right on top of him when he seemed to disappear in a swirl of
snow. The men had plodded back toward where Samantha and Jesse were standing,
shoulders hunched against the cold wind that blew.
Dave was almost tripping over his own
questions as Samantha, Glen and the two strangers came into the house. The dark
haired woman was barefoot, not seeming to mind or even notice the snow she
tracked in. Glen’s T-shirt hit her
about mid-thigh, but she gave no outward signs of being cold.
Samantha handled introductions while
Glen went to the car for their things. Everyone settled in the living room near
the crackling fire. No one spoke. Outside snow began falling again, this time
so heavily that it was hard to see much past the window.
“I couldn’t have ordered up a better
night than this for storytelling.”
Jesse’s voice was soft, but it caught
everyone’s attention. Samantha rested in the circle of Glen’s arms on DJ’s
overstuffed chair, looking at the other woman speculatively.
“So are we going to get some answers,
or should I just go get some popcorn and hot chocolate out for this fairy
tale?”
“Oh, answers. Although hot chocolate
does sound lovely. Perhaps later.” Jesse smiled at Steve. He grinned back at
her.
“You two know each other?” Dave asked,
catching the interplay between the two new members of the house.
“The secret’s out, Jess.” Steve was
still smiling.
“Had to come out sooner or later.”
Jesse sighed and pushed her dark hair back from her face. “Let me see if I can
simplify this. The man you are after is not a man, but a demon. Steve…and
myself…were sent here to stop him.”
“So he really is a demon?” DJ asked,
eyes widening.
“Most definitely. We don’t come from
heaven or hell. We roam the earth like you. Doing our good deeds, trying to
earn our way to either level.” Jesse shrugged.
“You guys are demons too?” DJ shrank
back from Steve, who was sitting to her right on the couch.
“Hell no.” Steve said, his drawl more
apparent as he blushed at his outburst. He looked at Jesse again as if awaiting
the Ok to go ahead. She nodded imperceptibly. “When I was alive I was…well…not
a very good person. Not bad enough to go to hell, not repentant enough to go to
heaven. So I came back, in a sense. Found this body, this man who had turned
fang. He was repentant. He was a good man, honest. He let me take over because
he understood that I would have to, because I had a higher purpose that he
could not understand.”
“Ok, you’re talkin’ crazy.” Samantha
interrupted him. “So if you aren’t a demon, what are you? Vengeful ghost?”
“No.” Again he looked at Jesse. Then
he sighed. “We’re guardian angels.”
“Angels.” Dave stated flatly, looking
from the big man on the couch to the half-dressed woman standing near the fire.
“Not quite yet. Like he said, we were
not the best people in the world when we were alive.” Jesse spoke, a bit of
humor tinting her voice. “We were given a chance to correct our mistakes, to do
selfless acts for others as a way to earn our wings. Or…to go the other way and
do hateful, evil things to become a minion of hell.”
“This is nuts.” DJ said, taking Dave’s
hand.
“You believe in vampires, werewolves,
but this you have trouble swallowing?” Jesse asked, arching an eyebrow at her.
“There are still people in this world who think fangs and dogs are storybook
ideas, dating back to darker times. I think we all know better.”
Steve was nodding. So was Samantha. Glen remained neutral.
“So you are a guardian angel.” Dave
said, looking at her with his head tipped to the left.
“Well, for lack of a better term,
yes.”
“Who do you guard? I mean, who’s
interests are you looking out for? I always thought you had one specific person
you had to help. Of course, that could be more storybook ideas talking.” DJ
looked around the room at everyone.
“Well…” Jesse hesitated and looked to
Steve. He shrugged. She turned to Samantha and gave her a smile. “I guess it
doesn’t matter now, if you know or not. I was assigned to your son, Alex. He
asked me to come help you.”
“What?” Glen spoke before Samantha
could.
“I’ve been with him since he was about
two months old. He’s got strange powers, and I’ve been trying to help him. He’s
still too young to understand, and I’m afraid I might be pushing him too hard.”
“So…” Samantha shook her head. “Alex
knows about you. He can see you?”
“My real form, yes. The way I used to
look when I was alive.” Jesse shrugged. “This body is nice and everything, but
in reality I was shorter, chubbier, and filled with confusion. Not a good
combination.” She smiled again. “Of course he can see me like this too, well,
more dressed but in this body. I’ve bonded with it, you see, and sometimes it’s
hard to forget that it’s not really me.”
Glen was rubbing his temples. “So last
year when Alex went on and on about his invisible friend…”
“That was me.” Jesse grinned.
“And how about that time he was
crying, right before we came here? What was that about?” Dave asked, bringing
her eyes to him.
“Oh, his power is just waking up. It
was the cemetery that was freaking him out. He could hear voices from there. No
one there died peacefully in their sleep, you know. He was feeling their pain,
their anger at being snuffed out. He can’t control it yet but he’s made
wonderful progress.”
“So he has a guardian angel guiding
him through this empathic stuff. But why?” Samantha was still trying to wrap
her mind around what she was hearing.
“I thought it was obvious. That boy is
special, Sam, more special than you or Glen could know. I have to protect him,
so he can fulfill his destiny. And that’s all I can say about it, because I
think we are already telling you people too much.”
There was silence for a minute. Then
Samantha turned to Steve. “And what about you? You said your sister was a
victim, so who are you watching over?”
“I thought it was kind of obvious.”
Steve smiled at her.
“What? Katie? Or maybe Lily. Was your
sister actually in any trouble?” Samantha questioned him.
“Well, technically she wasn’t my
sister. Steve, the real Steve, had a sister. And yes, she was a victim. Even
though he was a fang, he still had a streak of valiant intent. And family.”
“I get that. I’ve seen it myself.”
Samantha sighed. “So who?”
Steve was smiling again. “You, of
course. Why else would I just happen to show up just when you needed me, how
else could I have found you when you were running all over town?” He looked at
Glen. “The best thing you ever did was meeting this guy right here. That’s my
unsolicited opinion. You weren’t taking so many risks. Made my…uh…life a lot
easier.”
Samantha was looking at him, her mouth
open, at a loss for words. Glen cleared his throat. “So does everybody have a
guardian?”
“Not every one.” Jesse paced to the
window and looked out at the falling snow. “Only the truly good do, the ones
who are needed later in life for some big thing.” She looked over her shoulder
at Glen and smiled. “You have one. But I think it’s more out of a labor of love
than any special power you have.”
“Angie.” It was not a question. His
first wife had been his world for five wonderful years, it made sense that she
would still be looking out for him.
“Is that her name?” Jesse turned fully
to face him. “She’s not allowed to show
herself. There is too much of a bond between you. It keeps you from focusing on
life here and now, too much living in the past.”
Samantha tucked her hand into Glen’s
and squeezed. “That’s kinda sweet actually.”
“DJ.” Jesse sighed. “Diane. You are a
different story. This fledgling guardian was assigned to you because there was
a fang who had developed an interest and he was supposed to protect you.”
DJ shuddered. “You said he was
assigned. What happened?”
“Kennedy happened.” Steve spoke up.
He’d been looking thoughtfully at Jesse. “The fang that I…this body…killed was
the one obsessed. Your so-called guardian took over the body. And was
immediately obsessed. You tend to carry some emotions from the body you take
over, you see. This guy was probably already leaning toward the dark side.
Kennedy pushed him the rest of the way over. He became fixated on you, thinking
that if he wins you he’ll win his way to hell. He’s doing a damn good job of
paving the path with blood.”
“He says he loves you, am I correct?”
Jesse said, turning back to the window.
“Yeah. In one of those notes.”
“He’s convinced himself that he does
because there is no surer path to hell than killing someone that you profess to
love. It may very well be his ticket in. It may only be another in a long line
of murders. We can’t know for sure. He operates on a different wavelength from
us.” Jesse nodded toward Steve. “I can read his mind, for instance. I knew what
was going on here…even while I was with Alex during the night last night. He
has nightmares, you know, because his defenses are down when he sleeps…”
“We figured that part out on our own.”
Glen motioned with his hand, cutting her off. “What I don’t understand is how
we’re going to stop this guy.”
“Right. He melted my knife like it was
butter and he was the sun.” Samantha said sadly.
“Conventional weaponry does no good.
The body he’s in is already dead.” Steve said, rising to his feet. “There is
only one way to kill him for good. To send him to hell not as a prince but as a
sufferer.”
“And how do we do it?” DJ asked from
her seat.
“We have to start by giving him
exactly what he wants.” Jesse brought all eyes to her with her announcement.
11
“There is no fuckin’ way I’m gonna let
you do that.”
Dave was the one who broke the silence
that had fallen over the room. He wrapped an arm protectively around DJ’s
shoulders. She was looking at everyone else like they were crazy.
“It’s the only way. Besides, we’ll
protect DJ. Nothing will happen to her.” Jesse’s voice was soft, even. As if
she were soothing a wild animal.
“The hell you say.” Dave was scowling.
“Look, I know that it seems extreme…”
“Only a little.”
“But it’s the only way to lower his
defenses. He’ll be so happy she’s come to him that hopefully that obsession of
his will completely take over. He’ll bond with the body he’s in even more and
become that fang. Then we can deal with him.” Jesse pushed her hair back from
her eyes and looked at Dave as if daring him to challenge her again.
“I don’t like it.” Dave muttered,
squeezing DJ to his side.
“Duly noted. And I’d like to add that
if we don’t do this, now why he still thinks he loves her, then he’ll kill her
anyway. Eventually he’ll start resenting her for not giving in.” Steve moved to
stand next to Jesse. “He thinks that when he rapes these women, he’s giving
them something that they want, you see. Like they came to him.”
“So he thinks he’s irresistible.”
Samantha said softly.
“That’s right. And he doesn’t
understand why DJ isn’t moved to be with him. He wants her to be willing, he
doesn’t want to force it, but he will eventually.” Steve looked at the people
sitting in the room, expression serious. “We have to do this soon. He’s
starting to crack. It’ll happen pretty quickly after that.”
“How do you know?” Glen asked,
adjusting in his seat.
“Because the same thing happened with
Kennedy.” Steve looked at the bigger man, then to Samantha. “He’s been denied
something he wants twice. Do you think he’s happy about that? Hell no. He’s
probably throwing a fit right now. And that anger is going to focus on DJ.”
“How do you stop him once I…go to
him…” DJ’s voice faded out as she spoke. Dave looked at her as if she’d lost
her mind.
“Deej, you don’t have to…”
“Yes I do. I want this over, David. I
can’t take it anymore.” She smiled sadly up at him before turning her attention
to Jesse and Steve. “How do we kill him for good?”
Steve and Jesse shared a look. “I believe this is where Samantha’s love of
sharp objects will come into play.” Steve said, grinning. “The demon that took
over is really just floating there, controlling the body like a puppet. If he
gets mad enough…or if he gets sexually excited…he comes forward and becomes the
person he’s controlling. You’ll have to get him in the heart at the right time,
when he’s as close to mortal as he’ll get.”
“You aren’t suggesting we send these
two women in alone are you?” Glen asked. His voice had taken on a strange tone,
as if he were trying not to yell at the two people he’d just met.
“And me.” Jesse said, her voice again
soothing. “He’s tried Sam, he’s tried me, he wants DJ. I think if the three of
us were to go in together, he’d be quicker to nail.” She laughed. “That’s not a
sexual comment either. He didn’t get Sam, he didn’t get me. He’ll want to take
care of us too. He’s not used to being denied. He’s like a spoiled kid that
way.”
“Well I’ll go.” Samantha said,
shushing Glen when he started to protest. “It’s not like we have a real choice
here. Either we go in and get him or he follows us for the rest of our
lives…and eventually succeeds at killing us. And this asshole is not following
me home where my kids are.”
Glen was surprised into a laugh. “I
still don’t like it.”
“I can take care of myself.” Samantha
said. Steve cleared his throat. “Ok, and I have a little help. I can handle
him.”
“I hope so.” DJ extricated herself
from Dave’s arms and paced away from the couch. “When do we go?”
“Deej…” Dave’s voice held a warning.
“David, I’ll not run from this bastard
for the rest of my life. He’s already stolen a few months. I’m tired of being
scared.” DJ looked into his eyes for a long moment.
“We have to figure out where he is
before we can go anywhere.” Samantha said from her perch on Glen’s lap.
“Leave that to us.” Steve gestured to
Jesse. “Now that I know who it is, I think I’ll have an easier time tracking
him.” The two shared another look. “Do you have a bed we can use?”
“This is hardly the time for that.”
Samantha deadpanned.
Steve laughed. “It’s not for that…” He
looked at Jesse again, and conveyed the message that he wouldn’t mind a bit if
it was. Jesse blushed prettily. “We’re going to have to dump these bodies for a
while. It’ll be quicker that way.”
“Dump the bodies?” Dave asked, curious
in spite of himself.
“We’ll have to leave them briefly.
It’s easier to get around without lugging the flesh with us.” Jesse explained.
“And when we leave, these bodies will for all intents and purposes be dead.
Until we get back in them.”
“You can use my room.” DJ said with a
sigh. “I don’t mind. Not like I’m going to be sleeping anytime soon.”
“Lead the way. The sooner we do this,
the better.” Steve gestured toward the door. DJ led them out of the room.
“I still think this is a bad idea.”
Dave grumbled, looking down at his hands.
“You don’t honestly think we’d let
anything happen to your woman do you?” Samantha asked, leaning back against
Glen.
“I think we’re in way over our heads
here.”
“Well, stop thinking. Shouldn’t be
hard for you. I’m not gonna let that asshole get her. You can count on that.”
Samantha gave him a look. “He’ll have to go through me first anyway. Might as
well make it a challenge.” She felt Glen’s hands go around her. “And you…stop
being so overprotective. I got along fine before we got together.”
“Can’t help it.” Glen kissed her neck.
“I don’t like it. If this guys builds up a big enough head of steam there’s no
telling what he’ll do. I don’t want you to get hurt.”
“As long as he doesn’t chop my head
off, I think I can handle him.” Samantha felt Glen shudder. “That was a joke.
As far as I know he hasn’t collected any heads yet.”
“There’s a comfort.” Glen said with a
sigh.
Samantha gave the arm that was around
her a pat. “Poor baby. I suppose we need to find something to occupy ourselves
while Steve and Jesse do their thing.”
“I can think of a few things…” Glen
murmured and kissed her neck again. Samantha laughed.
“I was thinking more along the lines
of finding myself a nice, heat-tempered knife.”
“You want to go shopping? Now?” Glen
shook his head. “That guy could be anywhere. We can’t go out. I won’t risk it.”
“That guy is probably wherever he goes
to hide out, fuming.” Samantha rose, smiling at the protest that Glen uttered.
“You wanna come with me?”
“You couldn’t leave me here.” Glen
stood up. They nodded at Dave and went toward the door.
Dave sat there, fuming a bit himself. He could not believe that DJ was so
willing to put herself in danger. There had to be another way. He just could
not think of one. With a sigh he followed Samantha and Glen’s lead, standing to
his feet. He could hear noises from upstairs, footsteps as DJ moved around. He
felt a sad smile tug his lips. He couldn’t lose her, not when he’d just found
her again after all this time.
**
That was the second time in as many
nights that he’d failed.
He was in the barn again. He didn’t
bother turning on any lights. He could see in the dark, after all he had a pair
of vampire eyes to look out of. Right now they were glowing red in his rage,
giving everything a scarlet tint.
He methodically went from one end of
the barn to the other, tearing apart anything he could get his hands on. His tantrum went on for hours until he
finally collapsed, all of his energy spent.
He looked around at the destruction he’d caused. Ruined, his whole collection, ripped to
shreds and tossed aside carelessly.
He’d taken his rage out on the dead women’s bodies, unthinking, blinded
by his emotions.
It was not good. When he’d first
claimed this body, he had been a cold, calculating machine. Now the slightest
thing could set him off. Although Kennedy had been a fang, he was a human
before that, and those old feelings were still powerful way down at the bottom
of his mind. He didn’t need emotions. He just needed his woman. Diane.
With a groan of frustration he rose to
his feet with effort. He was very
tired. He would have to rest now, something he hadn’t done in weeks. That was
the other problem with taking over a human body. They had to rest and be
refueled constantly. Taking over a fang had been a good idea, it could go
longer without sleep, without food. And still, he grew so tired at the expense
of a good amount of energy that he would have to rest or risk the body failing.
Sighing, tired, he trudged toward the
house. When he woke up, when he was in a calmer state of mind, he’d decide what
he was going to do about Diane and her friends. He had all the time in the
world while they talked, spinning their wheels. It was almost enough to bring a
cold smile to his face. Perhaps tomorrow night he’d pay Diane’s house a little
visit. The time for hiding in shadows was past. He went directly to bed,
falling down into sleep filled with images of fire, of pain. And loving every
second of it.
12
Glen and Samantha returned to the
house just before dawn. They’d driven around for a while, talking, planning.
Glen did not like the idea of Samantha getting even more involved than she was,
but she of course was not hearing it. She was in her element.
David sat in the kitchen with Steve
and Jesse. They were talking quietly,
Dave with a cup of coffee in front of him. He looked at Samantha and Glen with
weary, tired eyes. “Find what you were looking for?”
“Several.” Samantha had a bag in her
hand. They’d found a store about an hour away that did not mind opening up for
them to browse around. Glen had chuckled as she’d picked through their various
blades, remarking on their traits. To him a knife was a knife. Samantha looked
at them as some women looked at shoes, or jewelry. She was infinitely picky.
“You won’t need them. They’d just be
ruined.” Steve said from his chair. He was toying nervously with something in
his hand.
“Yeah, well. It helps me with my peace
of mind.” Samantha put the bag on the counter and pulled a box out. They were
silent as she opened it up and experimentally flipped the blade.
“Good thing fire’s not your thing.”
Dave muttered. This got a snicker from the others.
“Fire’s all right.” Samantha said,
putting the knife away. “Too uncontrollable though.” She looked at Jesse, who
was looking morosely at the wall next to her. “Are you all right?”
“I’m fine.” Jesse sighed. “We might
have found him. He was exerting a lot of energy, it ended abruptly. He’s
probably sleeping right now, recharging.”
“So this would be a good time to go
after him?” Glen asked, taking the other empty chair. Samantha hopped onto the
counter and thoughtfully began unpacking her other purchases.
“Not at all. You see, when he’s
sleeping he leaves the body. We could go in and destroy the body, of course, it
would be easy. But the demon himself would still be around, still able to take
over another body and continue his quest.”
“So we have to kill the body while the
demon is in it.” Steve finished when Jesse appeared to become lost in her
thoughts.
“And that will in turn bind the demon
to the body. He’ll become its soul and be snuffed out like a candle.” Jesse’s
voice was dreamy. Samantha and Glen exchanged a look and stared at her. Dave just
shook his head.
“They insisted that DJ not be here for
the strategizing.” He said, unable to hide the trace of disbelief that tinged
his voice.
“What? Why not? Don’t you think she
should be hearing whatever we plan?” Glen turned his full attention to Jesse.
“Actually…” Steve spoke for her. Jesse
was once again staring at the wall. “It’s better she doesn’t hear much. Just
the basics. We want her going into this thing as if she were scared. We don’t
want her giving away too much of what we’ll be doing at the same time. He may
be able to read her once she’s close enough to him. We can’t risk him finding
out we’re there too.”
“Makes sense.” Samantha was chewing a
piece of gum she’d pulled from her bag. “So what’s wrong with you, Jess?”
“Nothing’s wrong with her.” Steve once
again answered for Jesse. “She’s keeping DJ asleep. She was pretty well wired,
nervous. So Jess here is working a little magic, putting her out.”
“Forced sleep. Hmm.” Samantha made a
noise. “I guess I know who to call next time I can’t go to bed before five in
the morning.”
“I can only use it in extreme cases.
It’s very draining.” Jesse said softly, her voice sounding mildly robotic.
Monotone. She suddenly shook her head and looked at the group around her.
“Sorry. Wow. She really was fighting it.”
“She’s asleep now?” Dave asked,
sounding concerned.
“Very deeply.” Jesse assured him.
“She’ll need the rest.” She looked at Steve and nodded. Steve hesitated and
turned to Samantha, flipping the object in his hand through the air.
Samantha snatched it out of her air without thinking, reflexively. “What’s
this?” It was heavy, small. A ring. The yellow gold was dull with age. Twin blades were etched into the band. In
the center was a deep purple stone, round, so dark it appeared black.
“A gift. I’ve been waiting for a long
time to give that to you.” Steve ducked his head. “I think you’ll find it more
useful than your knives.”
“A ring?” Glen cocked an eyebrow.
“Make sure it fits.” Jesse said with a
smile.
Samantha slid the piece onto her right ring finger and held it up, admiring it.
“It’s pretty. What am I supposed to do, cold cock the fucker with it?” Although
it was not a huge ring, it certainly had some weight to it.
“You’ll figure it out.” Steve said,
grinning. “There’s a house across the street, through the trees.”
“There is?” Samantha was still looking
at her new trinket as if mesmerized. It took effort to pull her eyes from it.
“I thought we were on our own out here.”
“DJ was. Until our friend Kennedy
moved in.”
“What?” Glen could not believe it.
“This thing has brass balls, setting up ops so close to DJ.”
“It’s not a question of his testicles.
It’s a question of his confidence. That’s how he was able to keep an eye on
her. At least, that what we think.” Steve said with a sigh.
“As soon as we left our bodies we
sensed him close. All that power he was using…” Jesse shook her head. “I don’t
think anybody realized that place was there. No one has lived there in a long
time. The house is falling apart. There’s an old barn in the back.” She paused
and fitfully toyed with her hair. “That’s where he keeps them. His victims. At
least…it was.”
“What, he’s moved them somewhere
else?” Dave said, leaning forward, coffee forgotten.
“No. He’s…” Steve curled his hands
into fists. “He’s destroyed them. By hand. Torn them apart in a rage. I think
it’s because he was thwarted, and he’s taking it out on women he’s already
victimized. An easy victory. Good for his ego.”
“I think our best plan is going to be
to fuck with him.” Jesse said with a grim smile. “Keep him off balance. The
angrier he gets, the more out of control he gets. And the more out of control
he is, the better our chances.”
“So how do you suggest we fuck with
him?” Samantha said, her tone serious but her eyes dancing. Digging for clues
was all well and good, but now was the part she really enjoyed, the proactive
part where they actually did something to win their battle. She was pumped for
it.
“Why, by messing with his belongings,
of course.” Steve sounded as excited as Samantha felt. Glen looked from one to
the other, a smile tilting the corners of his lips.
“No wonder they picked you.”
“Huh?” Steve looked confused. Glen
laughed.
“To watch over her. I think you share
her craziness. Just a little.”
“Oh. Probably.” Steve grinned. “Great
minds think alike.”
“Ahem. So what is the plan?” Samantha
said, drawing them back to the matter at hand.
Jesse smiled. “Well…it’s going to be a
little gross…” The others listened as she filled them in.
**
Samantha was covered from head to toe
with blood. And other fluids. Steve and Jesse looked just as bad. As if they’d
just went for a swim in a slaughterhouse.
After making sure that Kennedy was out
for the day, they had silently treaded the woods, keeping to shadows. They
avoided the house. Jesse said that the demon would not venture far from his
body of choice, having a need to protect it while it is vulnerable. The demon
itself had expended large amounts of energy and would be doing its own version
of resting.
They gone into the dilapidated barn,
and Samantha had gagged. The smell was horrible, worse than anything she’d ever
experienced before. Steve had given her a reassuring pat on the back, then had
whispered what they were going to do.
Three hours later, reeking, drenched
in blood, they left as quietly as they’d entered. Samantha was tired. She felt
slightly sick to her stomach. She’d dealt with a lot of things in her life, had
killed uncountable fangs and dogs, but this…this was almost too much for her.
Glen had offered to come, but she’d
waved him back to the house. He needed to stay on guard while Dave and DJ
slept. He’d agreed reluctantly, and had
watched the three of them disappear into the woods.
Now as they crossed the road, Glen
stepped onto the porch, hands in his pockets against the cold air. Samantha gave him a weak smile. “I need
three showers, two baths, and some new skin.”
“I think we can deal with a shower.”
Glen’s smile felt forced, he was too concerned to do more than that.
“Steve and I will stay up and keep an
eye on things. You two get some sleep.” Jesse said, nodding at Samantha. “I
think he’s going to wait until dark to wake up. It’s the fang body. He can
force it to go out in daylight, but it’s much easier in the night. So we have
some time yet before we need to go there.”
“Good. I need a nap.” Samantha’s smile
that time was more natural. “Wanna get the door for me, hot stuff? I don’t want
to touch anything. Oh, and turn on the shower, and get me some towels, and
soap…”
“Yes, your highness…damn.” Glen chuckled
and held the door for her. She kicked off her shoes on the way in so she didn’t
track gore everywhere in the house. “Was it really that bad?” Glen asked,
following her to the downstairs bathroom.
“What’s worse than bad?” She asked,
grimacing as she tugged her shirt over her head.
“Horrible, awful, disgusting,
terrible…”
“Yes. It was all of that.”
“Do you think this is going to work?
Glen started the shower as she finished stripping. She held her soiled clothes
in her hands and looked at him.
“It’s going to piss him off. As for
how it’s going to work…I don’t know.” She waved the clothes. “Can you get me a
bag? I’ll never wear this stuff again.” Glen nodded and went to the kitchen to
find a garbage bag. Samantha deposited the clothes and looked relieved. She
grinned and stepped into the shower.
She planned on scrubbing away at least a layer or skin. She rinsed her
hands and turned the water as hot as she could stand.
“When you get halfway clean, how about
some company in there?” Glen said, peeking around the shower curtain. Samantha
looked at him through squinted eyes. Her hands were in her hair, working
shampoo through the long locks.
“I suppose you could come in here and
get my back for me…” She grinned at him through the rising steam in the
enclosed space. Glen nodded and leaned against the wall, waiting for her to
signal she was ready.
They moved from the shower to the bed
they were sharing, falling into an exhausted, sated sleep sometime later. Samantha dreamed of blood, it was understandable
after what they had seen that day. She would not classify them as nightmares,
though. She had dreamed so strangely for so long that they rarely had the power
to frighten her or even disturb her rest.
She cuddled to Glen, head on his
shoulder, her hand on his chest. In the dim light of the bedroom the ring, the
heavy gold ring Steve had give her, began emitting a faint purple glow.
Samantha murmured and snuggled closer to Glen’s warmth, unaware of the light
that was filling the room.
13
Samantha was in the kitchen, chewing
on an apple, the first one out of bed.
Steve walked in and gave her his
crooked smile, then took the seat across from her. “Nervous?” It was a little
past four in the afternoon. They would have to leave shortly to get into place for
their plan to work.
“Surprisingly…no.” Samantha tossed the
apple core into the garbage. “It’s weird.”
“Nah. You just know what you’re
doing.” Steve looked past her. Samantha turned her head. DJ was walking into
the room, looking rested and smiling a bit.
“Good morning. Er…evening.” She
corrected herself with a laugh.
Samantha shared a look with Steve.
“Howdy. You sound like you’re in a good mood.” Samantha said, watching the
other woman prepare a pot of coffee.
“Well…” DJ, glanced at them again, then
turned on the faucet to fill the pot. “I’m just glad something is finally
getting done. That’s all.”
“Yeah, then your worries will be
over.” Steve said, leaning back in his chair. “Everybody can go back to normal.
I kind of miss the quiet life.”
Samantha rolled her eyes at him. “What
good is a guardian angel if I don’t put myself in danger every now and then?
Give you exercise.”
“I’m dead, remember? I don’t need
exercise.” Steve said with a smirk. “We’re going to have to wake everyone up
soon. Get this thing started.”
Samantha nodded and rose to her feet.
“I’ll get them. Where’s Jesse?”
“Out. She needed to pick up
something.” Steve evaded, watching DJ make coffee as if fascinated.
“All righty.” Samantha knew a lie when
she heard one, but decided to let it go. She didn’t want to start any arguments
before they went out that night. They needed to focus. She turned and left the
kitchen, heading for the stairs.
Jesse reappeared before they came back
down. Samantha was talking quietly to Glen as they went downstairs, a morose
looking Dave behind them. Jesse was carrying a sizeable white box as she
entered the house. She grinned at the trio coming down the stairs and ducked
into the kitchen.
Glen and Dave at a quick breakfast,
listening as Jesse told them she’d gotten a present…for Samantha.
Samantha was once again sitting on the
counter, swinging her feet. She looked at Jesse surprised. “What is it?”
“Well, I’m pretty sure it’s something
you’re going to need tonight.” Jesse set the box on the kitchen table and
removed the lid. Nestled inside white paper was a knife.
“Ahh…more weaponry.” Samantha did not
sound impressed.
“This is special.” Jesse hefted the
knife with a bit of difficulty. “It’s gold, so it’s heavy.” She explained.
“It’s black.” Samantha said with a
grin. It was not a knife as she’d first thought. It was too long for that. A
dagger then, two feet in length, made entirely of some black metal. In the hilt
were more of those purple stones.
“Trust me…it’s gold.” Using both
hands, Jesse tossed the dagger in Samantha’s direction.
Samantha caught it one-handed. It was
not heavy, as Jesse said, but lightweight. The grip fit comfortably in her hand
as if it were made for her. She admired the dark metal for a moment, then
squinted as a light seemed to flash from the blade.
“What the fuck was that?” Dave choked
on his coffee. The purple light had been fiercely bright, and no one had been
ready for it.
Samantha was still looking at her new
weapon. The metal had changed color with the flash, becoming smooth yellow
gold. “Is this thing for real?”
“It can’t be. Who has that much gold?
And what the hell was up with the light?” Glen was rubbing his eyes.
“It is. And you’d be surprised who
holds so much gold. And that light was Samantha accepting her gift. It’s hard
to explain. But the dagger likes her.” Steve said with a smirk.
“The dagger…likes…her.” Dave said it
slowly.
“It’s the simplest way to put it.”
Jesse said, grinning. “I decided to visit a higher power. After a heavy three
minute debate, they sent me back with that for Sammy.”
“First a ring, now a knife. It’s a
good thing I’m not the suspicious type.” Glen had risen to his feet and stood
in front of Samantha. She willingly held out the dagger when he opened his hand
for it. She dropped it into his hand. He grimaced at the weight of it. If he
tried to use it in a battle, he’d get his head bitten off before he could
finish swinging it once. Samantha held it with no trouble, taking it back from
him and experimentally cutting the air with it.
“I’d look weird tryin’ to carry this
thing around town with me, but I like it.” Samantha said with a laugh.
DJ was silent through this whole
exchange, her eyes riveted to the gleaming blade of the dagger. Dave reached
over and squeezed her hand. “Don’t worry. Sammy’s not good for much, but she is
good with anything sharp.”
DJ smiled at him. “That’s good to
hear.” She cleared her throat. “When are we leaving?”
“Right now would be good.” Steve
glanced at the clock on the wall. “We have to get ready. He’ll be up soon.”
Glen looked a bit nervous as Jesse led
them from the house. “I still think there has to be a better way than putting
Sam, DJ, and yourself in danger.” He said, falling into step behind Jesse.
“If you’ve got a better idea, I’d love
to hear it.” She said with a grin. “We’ll catch him off guard. After what we
did this morning, I think he’s going to be about ready to snap.” She sighed.
“It’ll make it easier. I want you, Dave, and Steve outside, ready to step in.
But don’t rush in too early. Let us handle it as far as we can. He would have
no second thoughts about killing a man. It doesn’t fit his scheme, but he’d do
it for the joy of it.”
“Duly noted.” Glen sighed. “I still
don’t like it.”
“What’s to like? We could all get
killed. And that’s the bright side of what could happen.” Jesse sounded
humorous. Glen frowned at her.
“You think that’s a bright side?”
“Considering the fact that this guy
likes to rape, torture, murder and apparently destroy the bodies?” Jesse looked
at him. “A quick death is preferable.”
“Great.” He slowed his step until he
was walking next to Samantha. He took her hand protectively in his.
“What did I tell you about buying
trouble?” She seemed to be exceedingly calm. Glen could detect no nervousness
in her voice, her posture, or her hands. The dagger Jesse had given her was
strapped to her thigh.
“Not to do it.” Glen said with a
smile.
“Don’t distract me by making me worry
about what you’re going to do, Ok? I love ya, but this has to be done. If you
get hurt because you think you need to protect me…”
“I live to protect you, Sam.” Glen
squeezed her hand. Samantha smiled at him.
“Well, you need to live for the rest
of your family too. Keep the kids in mind.”
“And is that what you’re going to do?”
Glen let go of her hand to wrap an arm over her shoulders.
“Of course. All I have to do is
imagine this fucker messing with my kids, and it’s go time.” Her smile turned
predatory. Glen was happy to see it.
Samantha was a hunter, even after all this time, and the old instincts were
never at rest. Feeling a bit reassured but still wary, he did not speak again
as they made their way through the woods.
**
He rose slowly, stretching, taking
satisfaction at the pops and cracks that issued from the body he was using. After
resting he felt much better about things. He’d had time to cool off, to refocus
on his goal.
The vampire body wanted to feed. It
was one of the things that annoyed him. The body tried to revert to its old
ways. With little effort, he tamped down the urge. He’d feed the body when he
went to town. Right now he had to visit his barn, to inventory his damage and
decide what gift he’d send to Diane that night.
At first he didn’t notice anything
different. He was lost in thought. Something caught his eye though and it took
him a moment to figure out what it was.
The barn was clean.
There was not one drop of blood, not
one trace of hair, no body parts, not bodies. The floor was poured concrete.
Someone had converted it to a garage years ago. On it were no signs of the gore
he’d left behind last night. The gray concrete only sported the ghosts of oil
leaks past.
He rushed around the room, seeking any
sign of his work. Nothing. Even the water trough had been scrubbed, the metal
looking almost new. Infuriated, he spun on his heel, meaning to exit the barn
and seek out the intruders who had destroyed his handy work.
He stopped in his tracks.
Unbelieving, mouth open, he stared at
the woman who had entered the barn behind him as he’d panicked and searched the
room. He finally gathered his thoughts and a smile formed on his features.
“Diane.” Her name was a soft whisper of voice. She nodded. She did not look
frightened. She had finally accepted his gifts. He knew without asking. And now
Diane was his, all his. With another cold smile he stepped toward her.
14
Samantha watched from her hidden spot
in the loft as DJ stood in the doorway of the barn. The gold dagger that Jesse
had giver her was in her hand. The metal seemed to be getting warmer.
Jesse caught her eye. She was on the
first floor, behind the water trough. She made a motion with her hand. Samantha
nodded and turned her full attention to the man who stood in the middle of the
floor.
DJ was smiling at him. Samantha had to
hand it to her, she seemed to be a pretty good actress. There was no sign of
the nervousness or terror that had plagued her the last few days. She knew that
the five others were around, but did not know where. Jesse had wanted DJ to be
as left out of their plans as possible, just in case Kennedy had any kind of
mind reading power.
Kennedy took a step forward. DJ’s
smile widened. She moved into his arms with no hesitation when he held them
open to her.
Samantha watched in shock as they
kissed. “What the fuck?” She whispered under her breath. DJ was pulling away,
looking into Kennedy’s eyes.
“The others are here.” DJ’s voice was
soft but it carried through the empty barn.
“Including our special ‘friends’?”
Kennedy’s voice grew harsh on the last word.
“Oh, especially them. You were right.
Again.” She grinned. “How do you like the body?” DJ backed up and turned.
Kennedy was eying her hungrily.
“Fantastic. Did she give you any
trouble?”
DJ made a dismissive gesture. “Only at
first. She was already too scared by your little gifts to put up much of a
fight though.”
“Where are the others?”
“I don’t know. I think that Jesselyn
suspected you were telepathic. They wouldn’t tell me anything.” DJ smoothed a
hand down Kennedy’s chest. “There are five all together.”
“Piddling.” Kennedy shook his head and
smiled. “That’s all they have for us? I would have thought I’d rate higher than
that.”
“Well, DJ did underplay her concern.”
DJ said with a giggle. The sound sent a chill down Samantha’s back.
“Hmm…well I think we have a little
game of hide and seek on our hands.” Kennedy raised his voice, making sure that
if anyone were in the barn, they’d be sure to hear. “Go to the house, DJ. Wait
for me. It won’t take long.”
“I want to help.” Her tone dripped
petulance.
“You will. I’ll deal with these hunter
friends of yours, then it’s just us. And our special guests.” He stroked her
cheek, then leaned down and kissed her again. “Go on now. Like we talked about
last night.” DJ nodded and hurried across the barn. There was a back door set
into the wall, hidden in shadows. Kennedy watched her go, a smile playing on
his lips. “Now…the fun.” With two
strides he was at the barn wall. He flipped a switch, dropping the building
into darkness.
**
Glen was gritting his teeth.
Steve looked at the taller man, wry
smile on his face. “That’s startin’ to work my nerves.”
“Sorry.” Glen stopped for a moment,
squinting through the darkness at the structure that was the barn. The lights
had gone out. That could not be a good sign. His started gritting his teeth
again. Steve sighed tried to ignore it.
“I don’t hear anything. If something
were gonna happen, wouldn’t it have happened by now?” Dave said in a whisper.
“Most likely.” Steve shook his head.
He refused to give into the anxiousness that settled into his stomach. “He
knows we’re here.”
“How? Besides the barn being cleaned,
how could he know?” Glen clenched his fists, then relaxed. Then clenched them
again. At least he wasn’t gritting his teeth.
“I don’t know.” Steve felt his own jaw
clenching as he felt the beginnings of righteous anger flow throw him. “We were
careful.”
“We should go in.” Glen took a step
forward. Steve stopped him with a hand on his arm.
“No. Wait for the signal. If they need
us, they’ll signal.”
“Maybe they can’t signal.” Dave said,
sounding frustrated. “Can’t you check on them? How the hell have you been
keeping tabs on Sammy all these years?”
Steve sighed. “I can check, I guess.
It’ll use up some of my energy though. Energy I might need later.”
“We’ll watch over you.” Glen said. “I
gotta know she’s…they’re all right.”
“All right.” Steve sighed again and
closed his eyes. For a few minutes there was nothing but the sounds of the
night around them as he concentrated. Then he laughed. It sounded strange, as
if from far away.
“She’s all right. Samantha.” Steve did
not open his eyes. He’d used a little trick he’d learned, sending a part of
himself to her. Instead of being silent observer, he’s spoken to her mind. And
the laugh had been her smart comment right back at him, also in her mind.
“What’s going on?” Dave shifted his
weight from foot to foot, ready to go running at the first sign they were
needed.
“They’re hiding. Kennedy turned off
the lights. He knows someone is there. He thinks the dark gives him an
advantage.” Steve’s voice still had a distant quality to it. “DJ knew. DJ was
helping him.”
“What?” Whispery voice gone, the word
was out of Dave’s mouth before he could check himself.
“Shhh…” Glen looked at he barn again.
It remained unchanged. “Can she elaborate a bit?”
Steve was silent again, just for a few
seconds. “They killed her. Killed her spirit. They sent her the body parts to
weaken her mind so another demon could take over.” Steve’s eyes opened.
“Christ.”
“Diane…” Dave’s voice had dropped back
to a whisper. Glen looked at his friend and put a hand on his shoulder.
“Dave…”
“Don’t.” Dave jerked away from Glen.
“Just…don’t, all right?” He turned to Steve. “There has to be a mistake.”
“There’s no mistake. I saw it with my
own…uh…eyes.” Steve rubbed his chin. “It’s kind of like hitting repeat on a
movie.” He looked at Dave. “We have to kill her too. You know that right? We
can’t let them destroy anyone else.”
Dave was shaking his head. “I can’t…”
“You can.” Steve was adamant. “It’s
not DJ anymore, not the DJ you knew.”
“I can’t believe I fell for it.”
“Why not? You hadn’t seen her in a
while right?” Steve hesitated. “It was really, honestly DJ when she called you.
That I’m sure of. I don’t know when this demon took her over, but it had to be
after that. They wouldn’t care if you came or not. They could find someone to
kill anytime they want.”
“That’s not comforting. At all.” Dave
felt like sitting down and crying. It was shocking to him. He had not cried
since he was a kid. Even when he and DJ had split up, he’d choked back his
emotions and buried himself in work. And now that he’d found her again…
He shook it off. And squared his shoulders. He knew that DJ
would not have wanted her body to be used as it was. They’d talked about fangs
and dogs, and she’d always said she would rather he kill her than let her live
like that. This was no different. He just had to keep telling himself that.
Inside, deep down, there was still that feeling of betrayal, of disbelief. He
could not focus on it now, could not ask questions he would never get the
answers to. With a sigh Dave nodded at Glen and Steve. “Let’s go in there and
end this. Now.”
15
Although it was pitch black in the
barn, Samantha could still see.
Not as well as a full fang, but well
enough to make out the outlines of objects. She did not see Kennedy though. He
was just a shadow among shadows on the barn floor.
When she heard Steve’s voice, seeming
to come from nowhere, she’s stifled the urge to jump. She didn’t want to talk
out loud, to give away her position, so she’d mentally cursed him. He had
laughed. Then he’d asked what was going on.
Samantha filled him in, once again
without words, on everything that had happened thus far. Steve had
withdrawn. Now Samantha lay still in
the darkness, waiting for a noise, a sign of Kennedy.
There was nothing. Five minutes
passed, ten. She was beginning to
wonder if she should just come out from her hiding spot and get this thing
going. No sooner had the thought formed than something caught her eye. Not
Kennedy, he was still in silent stealth mode. Her hand. More specifically, the
ring that Steve had given her. It was glowing, the purple tinted light seeming
to pulsate with her heartbeat.
Samantha gingerly covered the ring
with her hand. She figured she had just given away her position.
‘He can’t see it.’ Steve’s voice again
in her head.
‘Great.’ Was her sarcastic reply.
‘Consider it an early warning device.
It tells you when demons are close.’
‘How close?’ Samantha had been
shifting on her feet, peering into the darkness even as she conversated with
Steve in her head. Now she froze, straining even hard to hear.
‘Very close. Stay low. We’re gonna
come in.’
‘No. Damn it. We haven’t had a chance
yet.’
‘Sam…’
‘Don’t you Sam me. Get outta my head.’
She heard Steve sigh and then he was
gone. Relieved, Samantha let her hand wander to the dagger that was strapped to
her thigh. She froze again. This time because she’d spotted movement out of the
corner of her eye.
It was Kennedy. Even in the darkness
his white-blonde hair shimmered a bit. Samantha did not know how good his
eyesight was, but there was not way, if he were a fang, that he couldn’t see
her. He stood less than ten feet away and looked around. There was a flash of
white. Samantha understood that he was grinning.
“Gotcha, sweetheart.” He sounded
playful. Samantha sighed and stepped forward.
“I suppose it’s your turn to hide.”
She said, standing so that he could not see the dagger strapped to her leg.
“Hide?” He tilted his head, looking at
her quizzically in the darkness.
“Hind and seek? You know, you found
me, I’m it, I’ll count to ten and let you hide then I’ll come looking for you?”
Sarcasm was creeping into her voice. It was lost on the man standing before
her.
“Sounds like a fun game. I have a
better one.”
“Oh? Freeze tag?” Samantha grasped the
dagger, waiting.
“No. I call it, kill the nosy bitch
who ruined my place.” Kennedy chuckled. “I was hoping to find my special
friends first, but you’ll make a nice start. Too bad there isn’t time for…you
know.”
Samantha rolled her eyes. “As if I
would ever.” Kennedy had tried to sound seductive. She could not believe that
he was still thinking sex during all of this.
Kennedy shrugged. “Have it your way.”
He took a step toward her. “Too bad really. There’s something about you…” He
trailed off, voice sounding far away.
“Like I haven’t heard that line
before.” Samantha stepped sideways. Kennedy looked at her, his head once again
tipping sideways. Studying her. Perhaps changing his mind about time enough for
raping her.
When he dove at her, Samantha was
ready. The gold dagger flashed in the darkness, cutting the air. Kennedy threw
his weight against her, dragging her down to the floor. She could not get the
dagger at a good angle to stick him.
Samantha decided to go with another
idea. Instead of fighting him off, she relaxed under his weight. Kennedy was
ripping at the front of her shirt. She could hear the soft sound of buttons
bouncing away into the darkness.
“That’s right, baby. See, you want
me…” His breath was hot against her throat. Fighting against the nausea that
rose in her at the sensation, Samantha brought her knee up between his legs
with all her strength.
Kennedy screamed and rolled away from her, cupping his crotch, cursing her
under his breath. Samantha was on her feet in seconds, spinning to face him
again. He was quick to recover, gasping as he rose to his feet to stare at her.
She could feel his anger coming from him in waves. Good. She wanted him angry.
She could deal with anger. She did not want to deal with his fake seduction
technique.
“That’s the last mistake you’ll ever
make, bitch.” There was not playfulness in his voice this time. No longing, no
pseudo-passion. He was pissed off. Samantha grinned in the darkness.
“Come on and prove it, asshole.”
Kennedy took a step toward her. Then
grunted in pain. Jesse had snuck up behind him and knocked him on the head with
a metal pipe she’d found on her way up to the loft.
Kennedy spun on her, trying to keep
track of both women at once. His gaze settled on Jesse.
“You.”
“Yep, me.” She grinned.
With a cry of anger, Kennedy rushed
her, knocking her off her feet. Samantha was running, leaping into the
darkness, landing on is back. The dagger seemed to heat up in her hand as she
raised it above her head to strike him in the back with it.
Kennedy’s hands were wrapped around
Jesse’s throat. Jesse was trying to wheeze in air, gasping and clawing at him.
She pushed him up with all of her strength as Samantha jumped him, trying to
give the other woman a good angle for the dagger.
With a cry of anger, Samantha swung
the dagger down, over Kennedy’s shoulder. It sunk to the hilt into his chest,
the tip of the blade coming out of his back. Kennedy wailed in pain and got to
his feet, knocking Samantha away. He staggered, hands going to the handle of
the dagger, and fell to his knees.
Samantha went to stand before him,
watching as he gasped for air. The jewels on the dagger began to glow, matching
the ring that she was wearing. Kennedy
screamed once, his face a mask of rage and pain. He fell onto his side,
twitched once and went still. The soft purple glow from the ring and the dagger
winked out at the same time. They did not fade, but stopped glowing as if they
were candles that had been snuffed out.
Something was happening to Kennedy’s
body. There was muffled snapping noises, strange gurgling sounds. Samantha made
a face then leaned down, grasping the dagger in her hand. With one foot she
pushed back on his chest as she pulled with her hands. The dagger let go
reluctantly.
As soon as the knife cleared his
chest, Kennedy’s body began melting. That was the only way Samantha could
describe it. There were more of those strange liquid sounds, more pops. In the
darkness she could see his skin. It seemed to boil from the inside out.
Samantha backed up, bumping into Jesse. They grinned at each other.
“He’s gonna blow.” Jesse said,
pointing. Samantha turned back to Kennedy, watching as his body seemed to
swell.
“Gross. Is that what happens?” She
sounded fascinated. Jesse smiled in the darkness.
“Not all the time. Sometimes they turn
to dust.” The gurgling was louder. “I would suggest we get outta here, unless
you want to be covered by that shit.”
“I’m with ya.” Samantha gave the
bloated corpse one last look then turned and hurried after Jesse. “What about…”
“DJ?” Jesse sighed. “Dave is not going
to like it. We’re going to have to take her out. She was helping him you see.
That makes her just as dangerous as he was, if not more so.”
“Well, I’ll let you break the news to
him.” Samantha said, her voice sad. Poor Dave. She felt sorry for him, for
having to lose his woman for a second time. There was a loud pop from upstairs,
much louder than the noises from earlier. “There he blows.” With a grim smile
the women found the door and exited the barn.
16
Glen was shouting something.
Samantha turned her attention from
Jesse to her husband, who was standing just inside the tree line. Of Dave and
Steve there was no sign. She raised a hand in a half-wave then realized he was
not waving back. He was yelling and motioning at something behind her.
Turning, feeling as if she were moving
in slow motion, Samantha barely had time to see the crazed look on DJ’s face as
she leaped at her, a knife flashing dully in the moonlight. Samantha was
knocked backward into the grass with a shrieking DJ on top of her, swinging the
blade wildly.
Samantha managed to hit DJ in the arm.
The blade that was aimed for her heart veered right and sank into her shoulder.
With a grunt of pain Samantha rolled to her side, throwing DJ off of her. She
slowly got to her knees, the handle still sticking out of her shoulder.
DJ rolled and gained her feet quickly.
She snarled at Samantha and came toward her again, nothing in her eyes but pure
hatred and rage. Jesse stepped forward,
her arms snaking around DJ’s writhing body, holding onto her with ease.
DJ screamed and thrashed, fighting
against the woman who had grabbed her. Samantha was slowly getting to her feet.
Glen had appeared, rushing forward as soon as DJ had knocked his wife down.
Dave and Steve were right behind him, both looking grim.
“You killed him! You bitch!” DJ was still trying to get to Samantha. She neither noticed nor cared that the three men had joined them. Jesse shared a look with Steve and nodded. Steve stepped forward and helped her hold onto the fighting w