Past Due

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Past Due Page 9

by Catherine Winchester


  As they left the office Frankie checked the message that had come through on her mobile. It was Alex. He had found nothing on the database but here was still hope of finding Brad’s sire.

  Frankie told Will she needed to make a call and walked down the street a little way.

  “Frankie?”

  “Hey Alex. Can you go out yet?” It was nearly dusk so there was no direct sunlight but it wasn’t dark either.

  “It’s safe now, yes.”

  “Good. I need you to meet me outside Blackhall School. After your antics with my alarm this morning I’m assuming you’re good with electronics and there’s a silver Ford Focus there that I need you to disable. The radio too.”

  “Any special reason?”

  “Because I’ve had a DCI following me around all day and when I drop him back at his car, I don’t want him following me again. I have a lead for us to check out.”

  “I’ll be there in five minutes. Give me another five to disable the vehicle.”

  “Great, I’ll meet you there in ten.” She put her phone away and walked back to Will. “I’ll drop you at your car.”

  “Why,” he was suspicious again. “What have you got planned?”

  She unlocked the car and got in. “I’m meeting a friend. We’re going for dinner.”

  “A little early for dinner, isn’t it?”

  “I’ll be busy later, following leads.”

  Will narrowed his eyes at her. He didn’t believe her for a second but he also didn’t like her having a “friend”.

  “You can follow me if you don’t believe me.”

  “Yeah, I think I will.”

  Alex watched as the car pulled up. He saw the other man get out and as he walked up to Frankie’s car they looked each other over.

  Alex realised this other man was more than just a policeman. His body language was almost possessive and Alex was willing to bet good money that he and Frankie had been romantically involved. Alex could feel the other man’s eyes on him as he got into the car. He didn’t look back.

  Frankie pulled away even before his door was shut. So much for a happy reunion.

  “Where are we going?” he asked, putting his seat belt on. It was the law, after all.

  “To the beach. He has an old childhood hideout there and we’re going to find it.” She looked back at Will in her mirror. “Will his car start?”

  “Completely dead but it’s only a loosened lead. He’ll have no proof it was tampered with.”

  “Well done. Is there anything you can’t get into or out of?”

  Alex smiled. “Very little.”

  “Then you’ll have to advise me on a new alarm system.” Frankie passed her handbag to Alex. “Get my gun out, will you?”

  Alex did as she asked.

  “There’s a silencer in the glove compartment, can you screw it on for me?”

  He found the silencer and attached it. “Silencers make guns less accurate.”

  “Yes but I’m not going up against a vampire unarmed and I don’t want people hearing and calling the police. Do silver bullets kill vampires?”

  “Only if it’s a head shot.”

  “I’m suddenly wishing I’d put more hours in at the range.”

  “Any shot will slow us down, especially silver. We feel pain just like you do and if we lose enough blood we’re weakened.”

  “Good to know.” Neither mentioned how quickly she’d been disarmed last night.

  Alex could hear her erratic heartbeat and knew she was afraid.

  “I won’t let anything happen to you,” he assured her.

  “Thanks.”

  Frankie drove to the end of Marine Drive and parked.

  “Where are we heading?” Alex asked.

  “Don’t know. Somewhere down here is a brick building he used to play in, partially hidden in a mound or hill so we walk until we see it.”

  “And if we don’t?”

  “This is the closest beach to where he lived as a child so I’m guessing it will be close but if not, we try other beaches.”

  As they headed out onto the sand and began walking, Alex took her hand.

  “I hope you can see better than I can,” she told him, squinting at the grass at the edge of the sand. Dusk had officially given way to night.

  “I can,” he assured her. They walked in silence for a few moments. “This could almost be romantic.”

  Frankie smiled. “Except we’d be staring out at the moonlight bouncing off the waves, not looking for a grassy knoll.”

  “True.”

  Frankie hesitated for a moment. “Alex, about last night,” she began, then faltered. She scowled at weakness, she was a modern woman, this sort of stuff was supposed to be easy.

  Alex turned to her. “No regrets?” he asked, sounding slightly worried.

  “No,” she assured him. “Not really.”

  Alex frowned. “Some… concerns, then?”

  Frankie took a deep breath and ploughed straight in. “It’s just that we didn’t use any protection. I should have said something but… I guess I wasn’t really, I mean I don’t-”

  Alex cut her off. “Frankie, you needn’t worry, I am incapable of carrying disease.”

  “And children?” her voice was slightly squeaky. She prayed that myth was true.

  “Some of us can father children with mortals, but it’s very rare and I am not one of them.”

  “You can? I thought you were…” she couldn’t think of a nice way to say dead.

  Alex grinned at her hesitance. “When we’re changed a lot of things are improved; our reflexes and our senses for example. As well as that, any natural talents we have are also enhanced. If one was a talented musician in life, they would be exceptional after the change but if one was only a studied musician without a natural talent, there wouldn’t be a great improvement, save for the natural advantage of better hearing and dexterity.”

  “So if a man is very fertile in life-”

  “He will also be so as a vampire.”

  “So how is it decided which gifts are enhanced?” she asked.

  “Only those gifts which are part of us, those which are hardwired into our human DNA, whether we practice for them or not, are enhanced by the change.

  “Oh,” she was silent a moment, thinking. “So do you have any gifts?”

  He smirked. “One or two.”

  “But you won’t tell me what they are, will you?”

  “Where’s the fun in that?”

  “Can I ask you something?”

  “Of course.”

  “If you’re so hard to kill, why aren’t there more of you?”

  “We’re hard for humans to kill,” he corrected. “Most vampires die at the hand of another vampire.”

  “Because you can’t live together?”

  “That and young ones trying to prove themselves; plus the occasional war.”

  “Human wars or-”

  “Vampire wars. Grudges that escalate, some are seeking power over other vampires, some like the idea of going public and the rest of us have to wipe them out.”

  “Wow. How often do these wars break out?”

  “There’s one every century or so but there hasn’t been a war in Europe for almost five hundred years.”

  “So we’re due one then?”

  “No, we have new rules here that have kept the peace. A council of elders who hear grievances and mete out justice.”

  “And that’s enough?”

  “So far.”

  “Why don’t the council kill each other?”

  “The older we get, the more control we have when we’re together and the council usually holds session in densely populated areas, making it easier for us to be in close proximity.”

  “But it’s only in Europe?”

  “North America has a council too. Australia doesn’t have much of a problem since its population is thinly spread. Not many vampires choose to live there. China tried it but their council was wiped out.”


  “Wow, I didn’t realise it was so political.”

  Alex chuckled. “I guess politics invades all walks of life eventually.”

  “So do you have rules and laws?”

  “Some.”

  “Like?”

  Alex stopped walking and pointed. Frankie squinted into the darkness.

  “I can’t see anything.”

  “It’s a door. Looks like an old boat-storage room or something.”

  Frankie closed her eyes and reached out with her mind. “There’s something in there but it’s… I don’t know what it is.”

  “Not a vampire?”

  Frankie could see his fangs had extended and they glistened in the moonlight. She guessed he was in fighting mode.

  “No. It’s aura is bright but fluctuating and temporary, like a flare. Vampires are more like a halogen bulb.”

  Alex raised his eyebrows as he wondered how she sensed these things but now wasn’t the time for questions. He reached out with his own mind but could detect no life force. Whatever was in there wasn’t alive, nor was it undead.

  Frankie pulled her gun and a small torch from her purse and they crept silently towards the building.

  Alex would have preferred it if Frankie had let him handle this but he knew she wouldn’t let him. As far as she was concerned this was her fight.

  As they got closer Frankie saw that the door was padlocked from the outside meaning something was locked in.

  She tried to get a better impression of what lay behind the door but it was still not something she recognised. The door was down three concrete steps which they took slowly. Frankie positioned herself to the right of the door and dropped her bag and Alex stood in front of it.

  He inhaled deeply and smelled the same decay he had detected in the girls' apartments. Whatever was in here had something to do with the killings. He reached out and tried to find its life force but he couldn’t find anything. He listened but couldn’t hear any movement from inside - not even breathing or a heartbeat. Had he been alone he would have assumed the place was empty.

  He grasped the padlock and after a silent count of three, wrenched it off and flung the door open.

  Something lumbered towards him and he met it midway. The torch flickered on just as he was propelled towards the wall. He heard the faint ping of Frankie’s silenced gun going off. Three, four shots in quick succession. He was on his feet again and jumped on to the creature's back but not before it sent Frankie flying into the opposite wall. She crumpled to the floor like a rag doll as the torch tumbled across the floor, turning the room into a grotesque disco.

  “NO!”

  He grabbed the creature around its neck and began to pull, hoping to wrench its head off. Very few things could survive without a head. The creature grabbed his arms to stop him; it was as strong as he was.

  Seconds later Frankie was there again. She’d lost her gun and settled for punching and kicking. She was quite skilful but also totally ineffectual. The creature released one of Alex's arms and punched her in the ribs. Her cry was cut off as she fell back, winded.

  “Son of a bitch!” she screamed as she ran at it, jumping and planting both feet squarely on its chest before kicking out. Both Alex and the creature flew backwards into the wall as Frankie crashed to the floor herself. Alex’s head cracked against the bricks and he lost his grip as the creature got to his feet.

  Frankie had obviously landed beside her gun as she now stood in the doorway, gun raised, and fired the six remaining shots into the creature. It hardly even flinched as each shot tore into it. Frankie was once again thrown into the wall as it cast her aside and stumbled out into the night. This time she didn’t get up.

  Dazed, Alex made his way over to her. She was unconscious, blood pooling under her head. One lung wasn’t inflating meaning a broken rib had probably punctured it and he could hear that her blood pressure was dropping, meaning she had internal bleeding. Her pulse was slowing at an alarming rate.

  Frankie was dying.

  Chapter Seven

  Alex’s own injuries were serious and he would need all his blood to heal but Frankie’s need was greater. Alex could live with the pain of his injuries until he was able to feed; he couldn’t live with losing her. His fangs tore into his own wrist and he pressed it over her mouth. Her mouth filled up with his blood and he waited for her to swallow, praying her involuntary reflexes were still intact.

  Moments later she did swallow and continued to as his blood poured sluggishly into her mouth. He wished she could suck and draw more blood into her but she’d probably fight him if she were awake anyway. He fed her as much as he dared and then licked his wound clean. It closed within seconds but didn’t heal over. It wouldn’t until he had a chance to feed.

  He wanted nothing more than to get out of there as fast as possible but his instinct for hiding his true nature made him stop to pick up the gun and torch. He found Frankie’s bag just outside the door and put the gun and torch back inside but he left the shell casings as they would take too much time to hunt down.

  He scooped her into his arms and ran as fast as he could for her car, fishing her keys out of her bag. He laid her gently on the back seat and drove as law abidingly as he could to the club. He carried her up the outside stairs, into his apartment and laid her on his bed before collapsing to his knees beside it.

  He’d given her too much blood and needed to feed quickly. Knowing he’d never get moving again if he stayed still too long, he staggered to the bathroom. He looked a mess. Some of his cuts had begun healing but only partially. He washed his face, pulled off his bloody shirt and changed into a fresh one before heading downstairs.

  His hunger was worse than he could remember in years and it took all his self control not to simply bite the first person he saw. All those bodies pressed together, all those heartbeats, it was intoxicating.

  He first happened across Lisa, a young woman who had shared his bed a few times. She wanted to know what had happened to his face but he preferred to kiss her. Perhaps his injuries made her feel sorry for him; whatever the reason, she didn’t stop him. He steered her to a dark corner booth and fed from her. He needed more than he took and only the thought of what Frankie would think if he killed this woman gave him the strength to stop. He entered her mind and made her forget the encounter before leaving her in the booth.

  Next he found Gail, or more accurately, she found him. He took her up to his office and fed from her there. The urge to kill was nowhere near as strong this time and he had little trouble stopping. When he was finished he altered her memories, telling her that he had come on too strong and she had stormed out in a huff.

  Hunger finally sated, Alex went upstairs and returned to Frankie.

  Her heart beat was stronger now and he thought it would probably only be minutes before she woke up.

  He lay down on the bed beside her and closed his eyes. That had been the worst fight he’d had in perhaps 50 years. It had been reckless and foolish to blindly take on something he didn’t understand. Stupid.

  Yet there was nothing quite like the thrill of a good fight and in his heart of hearts, he had loved every second of it. In his everyday life he was constantly holding himself in check lest he hurt someone; he hardly ever got to use his full strength, no holds barred. He felt alive again. Powerful. If only Frankie hadn't been hurt in the crossfire. Maybe next time she’d let him handle it.

  Yeah, and maybe pigs would fly.

  “Ugh,” Frankie groaned and put her hands to her forehead. “How much did I have to drink and was it worth it?”

  “You don’t remember?” He asked.

  “The way I feel, I don’t think I want to remember.”

  He smiled. “In that case, you had a shed load to drink and it was most definitely worth it.”

  She opened her eyes and turned on her side. “Ow, shit!” she raised her head off the pillow and put her hand to the side of her head. When she looked at her hand it was spotted with blood. “I’m bleeding.”
She put her hand back to her head and felt the area more thoroughly.

  “You were bleeding,” he tried to reassure her. “Now you’re clotting.”

  Frankie sat up. “I feel like I’ve lost a fight with a freight train.” Her whole body hurt, her head was throbbing, her ribs felt bruised and judging from the size of her head wound- “I should be in hospital. Or dead.” She looked at Alex, worried and felt her neck for a pulse. “Am I-“

  “You’re not dead, or undead.”

  She relaxed as she found her pulse. “Then how?”

  Alex wasn’t looking forward to this part. “You were dying, I knew you’d be dead by the time an ambulance arrived so… I gave you my blood. The same force that makes me immortal saved your life.”

  Her eyes were wide, scared. “But I’m not a vampire?”

  “No. You would have to be almost drained of your blood first.” When Frankie didn’t respond he continued. “You’re already much better. In another three or four hours you’ll be as good as new.”

  Frankie was still processing everything. “I need a drink.” She staggered to her feet and went in search of alcohol.

  Alex was behind her in a second, steadying her. “Take it slow. Come on, this way.” He led her through to the living room. “Sit here, I’ll get you a whisky.”

  “How do you know I like whisky?”

  “Everyone likes whisky.” He returned moments later with three fingers.

  Frankie gulped the amber liquid, hoping it would stop the shivers she felt.

  “You’re going into shock,” Alex explained. “Hardly surprising. You will feel better soon.”

  “I already feel better.” She touched the side of her head again. It still hurt like a bitch but not as much as when she had woken up only minutes ago. “What the fuck was that thing?”

  “When you feel better, we’ll discuss it.”

  “So in the mean time I should just twiddle my thumbs until you feel like sharing?” Alex reached for her hand which she snatched away. “Piss off.”

  “Are you always so vulgar when stressed?”

  Frankie gave a hollow laugh. “Stressed? You call this stress? And yes I am. I can’t help it.” She stared into her glass. “He hardly flinched when I shot him. How can… And those eyes… They were milky… Dead.” She bit her lip, not wanting to think about it any further.

 

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