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Yearn For Blood (Blood Origins Book 1)

Page 7

by Tiffany Heiser


  bag. “Wish we could see what he has in there,” Cecile

  murmured, as he got back into his car and pulled away. We

  followed after him again.

  Part of me wanted to snap at her, or maybe laugh at

  her, but there was part of me that agreed. What one thing had

  he gone to the store for? It seemed like there was a lot to learn from that little piece of information.

  Oh, God. I was being obsessive.

  I wished suddenly that I’d had more experience with

  guys, so I could at least reassure myself that it was definitely

  Cryder’s vagueness and mystery that was making me act this

  way. That this wasn’t something about me. I didn’t want to be

  the kind of girl who stalked my boyfriends, looking for

  something to be wrong. I wanted to trust them.

  I wanted to trust him.

  “Maybe we should just go home,” I told Cecile.

  She turned onto an empty street. “Shit.”

  “Where’d he go?”

  “I lost him.” She pounded the steering wheel in

  frustration. “I knew we should’ve stayed on his tail.”

  “Turn left here.”

  “Why?”

  “I don’t know, I’m guessing.” If we didn’t find him,

  we’d go home, I promised myself.

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  Cecile swung the wheel—

  BLAM! There was a sound like a gunshot, or an

  explosion. The car veered precariously. A scream erupted, too,

  and it took me a second to realize it was coming from me.

  “Rena, calm down!” Cecile had both hands on the

  wheel. “It’s a blowout. It’s okay.” A moment later the car was

  stopped, and her hands were on my arms. “Hey. It’s fine. Just

  the tire. We’re fine.”

  I forced my breathing to return to normal. “I hate cars.”

  It came out in a gasp.

  “I know.” She squeezed my hands.

  “Do you know how to change a tire?”

  “I’ll call AAA”

  Three sharp raps came on the window. My gaze darted

  up. Cecile turned and rolled the window down just a crack.

  “Need a hand, ladies?”

  I sucked in a breath. It was the guy from the bookstore,

  the linebacker type I’d met right before meeting Cryder.

  “I’m Bristol,” he said, and smiled, showing all his teeth.

  BLOOD ORIGINS- BOOK ONE

  Chapter Eight

  “WE"VE GOT THIS UNDER CONTROL,” CECILE

  said. I could almost see her hackles go up. She hated unsolicited offers of help from men, never mind the fact that we actually

  didn’t know how to change the tire and, if it weren’t for her

  AAA membership, help would’ve been something we could

  really use right now. It was the kind of thing that would’ve

  annoyed me under ordinary circumstances—really, I’m a

  feminist too, but there’s a time and a place—but Bristol creeped

  me out so much that I was glad she was dismissing him.

  “You sure?” He stepped back a little, toward the tire and

  out of my view. “This is pretty bad. I think your rim might be

  bent.”

  “Shit. Really?” Cecile got out of the car. Immediately I

  felt uneasy. I didn’t trust him alone with her. I scrambled out

  the passenger door and around to where they were standing,

  eyeing the blown tire critically.

  “Look here,” he said, tracing a finger along the side of

  the wheel. “See how it’s a little caved in?”

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  “Not really…”

  Bristol looked up at me, and for the first time I noticed

  how dark his eyes were. I almost couldn’t make out the irises at

  all. I didn’t remember this from our bookstore encounter.

  Hadn’t his eyes looked more normal then? I wasn’t sure. “How

  about you?” he asked. “You see it, right?”

  I crouched down beside him to examine the wheel. “I’m

  not sure.”

  “AAA will handle it for us,” Cecile said firmly.

  “I could do it.” Bristol’s face stretched into a smile that

  seemed vaguely menacing. Was it just me? “Wouldn’t charge

  you anything.”

  “No thank you.”

  “I’ll wait with you, then,” he suggested, rising smoothly

  to his feet. “Two young girls shouldn’t be alone on the side of

  the road.”

  “We’re fine, thanks.”

  “No, no. I really wouldn’t feel right.”

  I started to stand up, to back Cecile up in her insistence

  that we were fine on our own—this wasn’t exactly a bad

  neighborhood, and anyway, it was daytime, for God’s sake—

  but before I could rise, a couple of dark spots on the cuffs of

  Bristol’s pants caught my eye.

  Red spots.

  The same red I’d seen on my fingers on my date with

  Cryder.

  Blood.

  Oh, God. Could Bristol be the murderer? Suddenly my

  BLOOD ORIGINS- BOOK ONE

  thoughts were racing. I’d met him just before meeting

  Cryder—Cryder, who was acting incredibly strange about the

  entire incident, who had been nothing but vague and

  suspicious with me. What if they knew each other? What if

  Cryder was protecting Bristol, and that’s why he’d been so

  hesitant to call the police? Or what if. .what if they were in

  cahoots?

  And here we were, stranded, alone with Bristol.

  I edged close to Cecile. “Can we talk for a second?”

  “What’s up?”

  “Um.” I had to think fast, to come up with something

  that wouldn’t make him suspect. “I need a tampon.” That

  ought to put him off. Boys couldn’t handle periods, everyone

  knew that.

  “I think there’s one in my purse,” Cecile said.

  “Great, would you mind?”

  “You can get it.”

  Oh my God, could she be more difficult? “I don’t want

  to go in your purse, Cecile.” I met her gaze and widened my

  eyes, hoping she’d understand what I meant—that there was

  something I wasn’t saying right now. If she pointed out that

  we went into each other’s purses all the time, I’d be screwed.

  The pause was excruciating. Then, “Okay. Come on, I’ll

  see if I have something for you.”

  I followed her around the car, heart in my throat. Cecile

  opened the back door and we both leaned in. “What’s up?” she

  hissed. “This isn’t really about a tampon, is it?”

  “No. It’s Bristol. He has blood on his pants.”

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  “What are you saying?”

  “I think he might be the murderer, Cecile.”

  She stared. “You’re jumping to conclusions.”

  “I met him once before and he was super shady then.

  He doesn’t go to our school even though he’s the right age.

  Now he shows up and wants to hang out with us while we’re

  stranded? This feels really dangerous, Cecile. I think we need to get out of here.”

  “I can’t leave the car!”

  “AAA’s coming. Lock it and we’ll run. Into the woods,

  okay? When we’re safe we’ll call AAA and explain what

  happened.”

  “Fuck.” She exhaled hard. “H
e is creepy.”

  “We need to move now before he catches on.”

  “Okay. Okay.”

  We backed slowly out of the car. I put my hand on the

  open passenger door and mimed slamming it, then pointed to

  the woods behind us.

  Cecile nodded.

  I held up one finger. She palmed her key fob, her

  thumb over the lock button.

  I held up my second finger.

  We both breathed in.

  SLAM!

  The door locks beeped as Cecile pressed down on the

  key fob, but I was already in a dead sprint. I heard her behind

  me, gasping, her footfalls heavy against the packed earth. I

  couldn’t tell if Bristol was following us or not, but I didn’t dare

  BLOOD ORIGINS- BOOK ONE

  look back. Main Street was on the other side of these woods,

  about a quarter mile from where we’d left the car. If we

  reached it, we’d be surrounded by people. We’d be safe.

  Run, Rena. Keep going.

  I wasn’t an athlete. I’d never been able to run long

  distances, and when we did the mile run in gym class I usually

  finished near the end. Cecile would have been surpassing me

  easily right about now, except she was wearing heels. I

  wondered if she’d had the sense to kick them off when we left

  the car. Running barefoot through the woods certainly wasn’t

  ideal either, though. Her feet could be getting all cut up.

  Again, I was tempted to look behind me, to make sure my

  friend was keeping up. But I didn’t dare.

  Then I heard a roar of outrage. The voice was deep and

  powerful and definitely didn’t belong to Cecile. Bristol. So, he

  was chasing us. Which meant. .which meant he had to be the

  murderer. If he was truly just a friendly passerby trying to help us with a flat tire, he’d be baffled by our flight. He wouldn’t be in pursuit. I felt a fleeting sense of vindication—we were right to run—followed by abject terror. A murderer was chasing us

  through the woods. I bore down and tried to run faster, but my

  breath burned in my lungs and my torso felt like one giant

  cramp. I was going to give out soon.

  We’re not going to make it.

  Cecile’s breathing had taken on a sort of whimper, and

  I wondered if she was starting to wear out too or if she’d hurt

  herself. If she fell, there was no way I’d be able to carry her and keep up anything resembling my current pace. We must be

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  almost to town, right? I thought desperately. But the truth was, I had no clear idea of how far we’d come or how far we had yet

  to go. Worse yet, I didn’t know how close Bristol was. For all I

  knew his hand could grab my shoulder, pulling me back

  toward him, at any moment. Never in my life, not even when

  I’d woken up alone in the hospital after my parents’ car crash,

  could I remember feeling such abject terror.

  I had to know. I risked a glance over my shoulder.

  There was Cecile, right on my heels, her face contorted almost

  unrecognizably by fear and exertion. I didn’t see Bristol, which

  gave me a moment of relief, but then he roared again. It

  sounded closer than before.

  A fresh thrill of fear shot through me. He’s gaining on us.

  Suddenly my body pitched forward. I jerked my head

  back around as the ground rushed up to meet me. I tried to

  take the impact on my hands, but my forward momentum

  propelled me over and into a roll. I came up on my knees,

  vaguely aware that my palms were skinned and full of dirt. In

  some far corner of my mind that wasn’t swamped with fear, I

  was surprised it didn’t hurt more…

  Then I saw what I’d tripped over.

  A girl lay on the ground, limbs sprawled awkwardly

  around her, hair tangled and dirty. She was about my own age,

  probably, and so pale that she was almost translucent. A split

  second later I saw the blood, cold and tacky, on her neck and

  shoulder. Her eyes were slightly open. She didn’t move.

  She was dead.

  “Oh my God.” Cecile’s voice came from behind me,

  BLOOD ORIGINS- BOOK ONE

  wavering all over the place. “Is that Caitlin Bessier?”

  I looked again. Caitlin was a year behind us in school,

  and I didn’t know her well. She was a lively, bouncy, flirtatious girl, always immaculately dressed and wearing a dazzling

  smile. It was hard to square that image with this pale, lifeless

  girl. Still… “I think that’s her skirt. I think I’ve seen her

  wearing that.”

  “Shit,” Cecile breathed.

  I got my feet under me. “We have to go. We have to go

  now.”

  Cecile squatted down. “Rena, look at this.”

  “Cecile!”

  “Look.”

  It was her I’m-not-taking-no-for-an-answer tone, and I

  knew it would be fastest not to argue. I bent down. Cecile had

  lifted a clump of Caitlin’s hair away from her neck. “What is

  that?”

  I stared. Two small wounds, each about the size of my

  smallest fingernail, sat side by side on her neck. “Snakebite?”

  “What the hell kind of snake.. .”

  There was a crashing in the brush behind us. Bristol.

  “Can we talk about this later?”

  “Yeah.” Cecile jumped to her feet—she was barefoot, I

  noticed—and set off running again. I ran after her. Maybe it

  was because of the break, or maybe I was just in shock, but my

  muscles and lungs weren’t complaining as loudly as they had

  been. All I could think about was the dead girl in the woods,

  the second body I’d encountered in a matter of weeks. What

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  Yearn for Blood

  was going on in this town? And why did it seem to be

  following me around?

  Getting to town ahead of Bristol suddenly took on

  new importance. This was about more than just keeping me—

  and Cecile—safe from whatever he intended for us. The police

  station was on Main Street. If we kept ahead of him, we could

  go straight there and tell them everything we knew. We could

  tell them about Bristol’s sudden appearances in suspicious

  circumstances, the blood on his pants, and how he’d chased us

  through the woods, and surely that would be enough to render

  him a suspect. We could prevent anyone else from dying.

  God, Caitlin. She was only a sophomore. All my

  memories of her were tinged with mild annoyance—she was

  too loud, too perky, and too giggly. She was like Cecile, but

  without brains or wit. But of course, I’d barely known her.

  Had we ever even had one conversation? I’d judged her and

  completely written her off without ever giving her a chance,

  and now she was gone.

  Cecile overtook me with a cry of, “Come on, Rena!” I

  focused on her pounding footfalls and forced myself to run

  harder. I could hear a lot of rustling now, the crunch of leaves

  and branches being shoved out of the way, and the thump

  overlapping thump of feet hitting the earth. How close were

  we? How close was he?

  “There’s. .steeple!” Cecile gasped out, pointing ahead.

  Through a gap in the trees, I could ma
ke out the tall white

  peak of the Main Street Chapel. We were almost there…

  Something struck my back with incredible force,

  BLOOD ORIGINS- BOOK ONE

  driving the air out of my lungs and propelling me forward so

  fast I didn’t have time to get my hands under me. I landed face

  down in the dirt, sending a bolt of pain through my body.

  When I tried to scramble to my feet, I couldn’t. A strong arm

  held me down.

  “Gotcha,” Bristol’s voice grated out, deep and laced

  with a sinister delight.

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  Yearn for Blood

  Chapter Nine

  HIS BREATH WAS HOT ON MY NECK AND

  his fingers dug into my shoulders so hard I was worried they

  might be about to draw blood. “We met too early,” he said, his

  voice almost a hiss. “You weren’t ready for me then, were you?

  But you are now, you’re nearly ripe…”

  Cecile screamed, her voice seeming to come from very

  far away, and I heard the wet crunch of a body taking a blow.

  Bristol’s weight shifted on my back, but not enough to let me

  up.

  “Cecile, go get help!” I half-cried, half-gasped.

  “Cecile,” Bristol said, “If you move an inch, I’ll kill her so fast you won’t even see it happen.”

  Fear spiraled out from my heart to each of my limbs. I

  flexed with it. It should have given me power –adrenaline-- but

  Bristol’s strength was too much for me to hope to overpower

  him. Somewhere behind me, Cecile was breathing in short,

  whimpering gasps and I knew she’d been too afraid to run for

  help. He’s going to kill me anyway, I thought. He’s going to kill

  BLOOD ORIGINS- BOOK ONE

  me, and because she’s not a threat, he’s going to take his time. And then he’s going to kill her.

  I thought about the puncture wounds we’d seen on

  Caitlin’s neck when we’d passed her body in the forest. What

  made that kind of mark? What was Bristol about to do to me?

  And what had he meant when he said I was nearly ripe?

  As if in answer to my silent question, he stroked two

  fingers along the side of my neck and began to speak. “You’re a

  danger, you know, Rena,” he said. “Such a little girl, but you’re a threat. Did you know that? Do you know how many of us

  live in fear of you?”

  I couldn’t make sense of his words. I wasn’t sure I

  wanted to. Maybe he was insane.

  He shifted his weight again. “Stand up.”

 

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