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Night's Vampires: Three Novels

Page 40

by H. T. Night


  “Tyreen!! Hold on!!!”

  I sensed the bastard moving up closer to take another bite, only from me this time. There was no way I could fight the monster off if it caught me, and I sure as hell wasn’t going to let it get Tyreen, who collapsed on the ground.

  This was going to be where it ended. My life and hers, I just knew it. Both of us totally fucked.

  A sudden spray of bullets pummeled the creature and two others that appeared, seemingly out of nowhere. More angry shrieks—even worse than the previous one—erupted all around us. I thought for sure we’d all be attacked. The police with raised weapons gazed anxiously into the darkness above them while I hovered over Tyreen’s motionless body.

  But the menace retreated, at least for the moment

  “Are you all right?” asked the cop closest to me. He didn’t wait for a response, perhaps seeing I was unharmed before he even asked, other than a limp from aggravating my ankle again. A hardened veteran roughly my father’s age, he glanced at me with steel blue eyes before turning his attention to Tyreen. “Let’s get her inside, Jim!” he told another cop who came up to join him. “Bobby, I need for you to call in another patrol for back-up, and tell ‘em to have the S.W.A.T. team ready in case we need it!”

  “Got it, boss!” said another cop, taller than the rest.

  Three more police officers came over to help carefully carry Tyreen into the lobby. I followed close behind them, fearing the worst while praying she’d be all right. I looked outside to confirm our attackers had really left, as they had the other night. I didn’t see anything, but the darkness beyond the security lights could easily hide any predator, and I knew they had to be hiding out there someplace, biding their time before launching another attack. Meanwhile, the cops outside remained huddled together, searching the darkness with the same fearful look I’d seen on Tyreen’s face earlier. Like us, they had no idea how to effectively combat these lesser vampires. But they would be schooled soon…sooner than any of them could’ve ever imagined, I’m sure.

  That, however, was the least of my concerns. I was beside myself, thinking Tyreen might die from her injuries. She had lost a lot of blood, which left a dripping crimson trail as they brought her inside. But one of the cops, named Ty Sorwell, had spent time as a paramedic. He assured me that she’d be fine. When I didn’t believe him, he showed me the wound to her shoulder, which was the main one. Deep tears in her flesh, but not so deep the bleeding couldn’t be stopped. And when I worried about how an ambulance could reach the dorm with the menace still out there, he assured me Tyreen wouldn’t need one for now, and that we had enough medical supplies to get her through the night.

  Obviously, he didn’t wish to venture outside any more than I did. But the low tremors shaking her body told me she was in shock—something I’m sure Ty knew too.

  “We just need to get her stable, and then she’ll be fine,” he said, surely noticing my increased worry in regard to Tyreen’s condition. The youngest male in the group, and by far the best looking, Ty’s soft brown eyes reminded me of Peter’s. “You might want to take a seat by the TV while we get everything taken care of.” He smiled, revealing two perfect rows of veneers.

  “Okay,” I agreed, and took a step toward the middle of the lobby where the television was. But then I thought of Johnny and Peter waiting upstairs, and me not being able to call them since I left my cell phone in my room. “Just let me go upstairs, so I can let her boyfriend know what’s happened….I’ll be right back!”

  Before he could stop me, I’d made my way to the elevator, noticing three guys sitting in front of the TV suddenly look up, as if until that moment they had absolutely no clue what was going on. Luckily, the elevator door opened right away, and I stepped inside.

  But just as I pushed the button for the fourth floor and the door began to close, an immense crash shook the building’s main floor. I heard screams and even more gunshots, along with the sound of breaking glass and terrible inhuman screeches from near the main entrance.

  Looking back on this, I should’ve stayed and try to lure the bastards away from Tyreen. But at the time, I thought Johnny and Peter—and whoever else was upstairs—could help us aid the police in fighting these fiends.

  Such tragic folly—especially after I learned later that nearly two dozen of the creatures attacked the lobby. We couldn’t have saved anyone.

  When I reached my floor, the handful of girls who had yet to leave were running around in a panic. Breaking glass and more unearthly shrieks resounded from either side of the hall, and behind the doors leading to the men’s side of Massey Hall I heard similar shrieks, and screams from our terrified male counterparts, no less.

  “Txema—get back in the elevator!!” Elaine Johnson, our floor’s RA shouted at me. “They’re attacking everybody! They’re—oh my God!! Oh God, NO-O-O!!!”

  I had stepped out of the elevator, and Elaine stood outside her room, just inside the entrance to our wing. Or, I should say she stood there for a moment following the destruction of her room’s picture window. Within seconds of her panicked scream, something flew out into the hallway and grabbed her. My first impression was of a hideously deformed, hairless, white man. Very tall and naked, except for a dark tunic around his waist, with no shoes covering elongated feet with sharp nails curled at the end of each toe.

  But that wasn’t what frightened me. A pair of glowing yellow eyes and a mouthful of jagged sharp teeth, opened wide with dripping saliva as it leered at me, the fiend held Elaine’s trembling body fast with one hand while it used the long sharp fingernails on its other hand to tear her throat open. Too late to save her, I could only stare in horror, tortured by her terrible screams as the thing’s horrible Nosferatu face bore itself into her neck, quickly turning its pale skin crimson from my RA’s blood.

  It had all become too much for me…the terror and the horror, and I burst into tears. But before I collapsed where I stood, I caught a sudden glimpse of a blurred image racing toward me following an explosion of the wooden door to the guys’ wing. Then something grabbed me, and I became aware of two small needle-like sensations upon the birthmarks on my neck. For the second time in four days my body grew weak and the world swam around me. I was unable to move and couldn’t respond to anything—not even Peter and Johnny’s panicked screams as they ran toward me from further down the hall. For the second time in four days, everything went black.

  Chapter 12

  The last time I lost consciousness like this, I awoke in a huge cold room that at first seemed like a constrictive coffin. A cold hand with sharp fingernails grabbed my throat, and I remember hearing whispered voices decide my fate, growing steadily more menacing until Peter’s voice broke through and pulled me back into the warm comfort of my dorm room. A safe and welcome place, my friends surrounded me—ready to do whatever they could to make things right.

  It certainly wasn’t the case this time around.

  “Welcome, Che-e-e-m-m-a-a!!”

  The voice was inhumanly deep despite a thick Eastern European accent. It rumbled throughout the dungeon-like room I found myself in. I tried to determine what nationality the voice represented. Was it Romanian? Turkish? Hungarian? Or, maybe it was the homeland of Dracula himself, Transylvania. That one brought a weak smile, given all the nonsense I’d endured for much of the past week.

  But at least the voice carried no menace…at least not yet. The exaggerated phonetic pronunciation of my name assured me of that much.

  There also was warmth—and not just from a roaring fire that burned within a nearby fireplace. The thunderous male voice carried mellowness as it bounced off the stone walls….like a long lost uncle amused by his niece’s childish antics.

  I sat in a large wooden chair with a tall back, and remember, dear reader, that I’m not small in stature. Yet the chair made me feel even more like a little girl, where my feet barely touched the barren floor.

  “Wh-who are you?” I asked, still nervous. Disoriented.

  I looked
around the room, hoping to get my bearings as to what and possibly where this place was. Obviously the ‘where’ would be most difficult to determine, but the ‘what’ was getting clearer for me. It wasn’t a dungeon, unless my mysterious host favored the bowels of some ancient castle. Ornate tapestries hung from a wall to my left, and to my right a row of three stained glass windows, featuring haloed figures in Byzantine dress. At least it reminded me of that sort of thing, based on clothing examples I remember seeing from a medieval history class I took back in high school. Perhaps this place was some kind of church or cathedral instead of a castle.

  The voice chuckled, and a hulking figure that had been sitting in a similar chair near the tall fireplace stood up. I could tell in the shadows that whoever it was wore a long dark cloak, probably some sort of velvet, as the sleeves shimmered from the firelight and soft rays from the moon streaming in through the windows.

  “I am Ralu Izcacus,” said the owner of the voice. “I am the reigning king of the largest vampire nation, known in privileged circles as the ‘Vampire kan isyanı’. But surely you have not heard of us, although your world will soon know us very well. As the people in your country, America, are fond of saying, this past week has been our ‘coming out party’.”

  The way he emphasized the word ‘vampire’ spoke to arrogance and deep pride. I thought about all of the needless killings I’d witnessed very recently while he laughed again. He stepped toward me and then leaned against a jeweled golden scepter, bringing his face within a few feet of mine until I gasped. He was taller than I would’ve initially guessed, nearly seven feet in height. But if he ever was an attractive man, comeliness was no longer part of the deal for him. Like the Nosferatu-looking vampire I witnessed earlier devouring Elaine Johnson’s throat, his head was bald, and his ears pointed. His sharp jagged teeth were muted at the moment, for his mouth was closed. Just the fangs protruded from each side, making him look like a dangerous saber-tooth cat sizing up his prey.

  His appearance frightful, I suddenly felt uneasy. It was mainly the eyes. Fiery crimson in their intensity, they bore the same luminance so prevalent among every preternatural creature I had encountered this past week. But the difference here was Ralu’s eyes made him look worse than predatory. He looked frigging evil—like the damned devil himself!

  “You have much to learn, Txema!” he chided, leering at me while he moved over to a long primitive wooden desk that sat to the left of the fireplace. He struck a match and lit a thick white candle sitting upon the desk’s top, and then stepped around to the other side. “We are not the monsters you perceive…and we are not the ones who provoked the battle with your newfound friends.”

  “You mean the other vampires?” I sought to confirm, frowning as my mind worked furiously to glean what I could from my conversations with Garvan, Armando and Chanson. “Since when did they or anybody else do anything to you!”

  I could feel the irritation literally climb up my throat, forgetting for the moment my place and disadvantaged position.

  “You cannot imagine the wars waged between us for hundreds of years—even thousands, if we count the early disagreements in Atlantis and later, Egypt and India,” he replied, calmly, despite the sharpness in my tone. “Our estranged brethren have forgotten their natural place in the world, and have manipulated how things are run in your world for many centuries. Their worst abomination deals with you and your kind.”

  “What do you mean by that?”

  Honestly, I had a pretty good idea, and I’m pretty damned certain he knew this too. He looked at me, his hellish eyes locked onto my sullen gaze, ever hopeful he couldn’t sense the depth of my nervousness. If nothing else was clear, I at least understood that I was an endangered species. Armando and the others had done what they could to stop this other type of vampire from killing me and stamping out the last of the strange birthmark bearers.

  “Yes…you already know, Txema," he said, the smooth warmth in his voice giving way to a slight iciness. “All you’re doing by running is prolonging the inevitable.”

  “Running?” I couldn’t believe how he’d say such a thing, since we sat together in the room with no obvious route for escape. I noticed then that two more cloaked figures stood just outside the shadows near the room’s doorway. For the moment, what looked like a heavy wooden door was closed behind them.

  “Yes, running,” he repeated, his tone much softer…thoughtful. “It saddens me that the last of any race on earth must perish. Yet, the sooner it ends for you, the sooner we can get on with usurping our rightful place in the world!”

  A chill crept down my spine and the soft hairs on my arms rose to full attention. How quickly his delivery went from the edge of compassion to such a sinister musing. Like he desired the deeper contempt within his heart to travel across the room and tear its way into me—to destroy me where I sat. I latched onto the absurd notion that perhaps for some reason he couldn’t touch me physically—that somehow I could still elude his long sharp fingers’ grasp despite my close proximity to this inhuman giant.

  He sat down and studied me where I sat, his hostile gaze continuing to bore into me. For a moment, he said nothing, allowing his pursed lips to open slightly. Wide enough to where I could see a row of long sharp teeth kept hidden until that moment.

  “Yes, not much longer will I have to endure my enemies’ celebration, their jubilation at finding the last of the Vampire Lovers, their precious ‘Les Amants de Vampire’!”

  Ralu’s charms knew no bounds, and with each snide threat I grew more and more uncomfortable. Hard to know how to respond to any of this, but apparently my blank expression wasn’t what he hoped for. In a nanosecond, he crossed the table and was in my face, the stench of decaying flesh filling my nostrils.

  That certainly got my attention. Like I’ve said before, I really hate it when they do that sort of thing.

  “Mark my words, Txema. The imposters who call themselves your ‘friends’ will not save you in the end—regardless of the elaborate tales they will concoct, and no matter what immortality ceremony they come up with!” he warned, getting angrier by the second. I tried to scoot back in my chair, but there was no escaping Ralu’s contempt and aggression. “The only way you’ll survive is through our version of the Dark Gift—the one true ‘Salut de sang’!

  I took Spanish in high school, and the only French I understood was the few phrases spoken by my paternal grandmother. Odd as it may seem, I had heard this ‘Salut de sang’ mentioned before. Though I couldn’t be completely sure on the translation, I knew that ‘sang’ meant blood in most of the Romance languages, and Grandma Terese used the word ‘salut’ during many of her Catholic prayers—especially the ones her family brought to America from France. She said it meant salvation.

  So, this was about ‘blood salvation’, which had something to do with a ‘dark gift’?

  Ralu’s widening leer confirmed my basic understanding of what he said, as well as the likelihood that he enjoyed full disclosure of my thoughts and growing terror. His next actions reinforced that his words would stay locked in my head forever more.

  “Surrender your blood and be one with us…become our princess—our queen in waiting!”

  “Hell, no!!”

  Perhaps my response came out faster than it should have, before I could censor how it might affect my captor and my fate. Again, that’s always been a problem with me. Incensed, his eyes narrowed and he brought up his left hand, armed with long sharp fingernails. His fingers suddenly splayed open. Armed and dangerous.

  “Very well,” he sneered, snickering again in contempt.

  Before I could apologize and utter a plea for my life, he raked those nails across my throat. Deep enough to sever my esophagus, vocal chords, and my jugulars. A crimson river washed down my parka, spilling through the zipper onto my sweatshirt. I couldn’t breathe, I couldn’t move, and worst of all, I couldn’t scream….

  ***

  …I awoke with a start in bed. It had been a dream aft
er all.

  The worst frigging nightmare I’d ever experienced!

  Relieved, I sat up, gasping for air while I reached for my throat. My hands felt clammy. The room dark, at least the air was warm. Reasonably assured no one else was there with me, I stepped out of my bed, surprised by the cool wooden floor beneath my feet. This certainly didn’t feel anything like the worn carpet in my dorm room. Add to that fact my ankle hurt like a mother….

  Where the hell am I?

  Light seeped through the bottom of a small round window near my bed, and in the dimness I could make out the outlines of a desk and a dresser in the room. I limped over to the window and lifted the shade.

  Imagine my shock to see nothing but blue for as far as my eyes could see! Somehow, I ended up in the middle of some enormous lake or a damned ocean.

  Panicked, I scurried over to the door, fearing it would be locked. It wasn’t. I threw it open and craned my head to look down both sides of a deserted hallway. An ornate carper runner covered the floor, and a row of polished brass light fixtures lined the wall. I envisioned that the room I just stepped out of might be lined with the same expensive grade of cherry paneling.

  This had to be a ship, and a luxurious one at that.

  In my excitement to find out where I was, I ignored the fact I only had on a pair of panties and the T-shirt I wore beneath my sweatshirt. But once I saw my reflection in the room’s mirrored door, I hobbled back inside. I found my jeans and sweatshirt hanging on a dark leather chair next to the bed, and when dressed more appropriately I ventured back into the hallway.

  “Hello?.... Is anybody here??”

  Maybe it wasn’t the wisest thing to do, especially without knowing who else shared this vessel with me. But there was no response, other than the steady hum from the ship’s engines.

 

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