The Utterly Uninteresting and Unadventurous Tales of Fred, the Vampire Accountant
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ewThe Utterly uninteresting and unadventurous tales of Fred, the vampire accountant Drew Hayes
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Electronic Edition License Notes
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Table of Contents
Dedication
A Note From The Author
A Vampire at the Reunion
Book One - Chapter One
Book One - Chapter Two
Book One - Chapter Three
Book One - Chapter Four
Book One - Chapter Five
Book One - Chapter Six
Book One - Chapter Seven
A Zombie at the LARP
Book Two - Chapter One
Book Two - Chapter Two
Book Two - Chapter Three
Book Two - Chapter Four
Book Two - Chapter Five
Book Two - Chapter Six
Book Two - Chapter Seven
A Weresteed at the Slots
Book Three - Chapter One
Book Three - Chapter Two
Book Three - Chapter Three
Book Three - Chapter Four
Book Three - Chapter Five
Book Three - Chapter Six
Book Three - Chapter Seven
Book Three - Chapter Eight
A Mage at the Park
Book Four - Chapter One
Book Four - Chapter Two
Book Four - Chapter Three
Book Four - Chapter Four
Book Four - Chapter Five
Book Four - Chapter Six
Book Four - Chapter Seven
Book Four - Chapter Eight
A Monster in the Pews
Book Five - Chapter One
Book Five - Chapter Two
Book Five - Chapter Three
Book Five - Chapter Four
Book Five - Chapter Five
Book Five - Chapter Six
Book Five - Chapter Seven
About Drew Hayes
Connect with Drew Hayes
Copyright
Dedication
This book is dedicated to the uncool, uncoordinated, unexceptional, uncharming, uninteresting, and especially the unashamed. To everyone from the Awkwards to the Zeroes, living as the proud oddballs they are. This book is dedicated to my people.
A Note From The Author
I almost certainly do not know you; however, I shall assume you are a lovely person, and it is my loss for not having the opportunity to meet you. Still, I must assume you and I are connected in some way, for the works you are about to read are some selections from a journal of my memoirs. I compiled these not in the belief that the stories within are so compelling they must be told, but rather because I found my unexpected life transition to be so shockingly uneventful, at least initially. I place the blame for my aggrandized expectations squarely on the contemporary media, filling my head with the belief that a ticket to the supernatural also put one on an express train toward coolness and suave charm.
This is simply not the case. Or, at least, it was not in my case. I recorded my journeys in the hopes that, should another being find themselves utterly depressed at the humdrum personality still saddling their supernatural frame, they might find solace in knowing they are not the only one to have felt that way. Names have been changed as I deemed necessary. Given the lengthy lifespan of many people with whom I associate, there is no guarantee they will have passed on by the time this is read.
So, dear reader, whom I suspect is a wonderful person merely in need of a bit of reassurance, take comfort in my tales of uneventful blundering. One’s nature is hard to change; sometimes even death is insufficient to accomplish such a task. Be assured that, while you might find yourself still more human than anticipated, you are far from the only one. You will eventually discover that under the movie stereotypes, imposed mystique, and overall inflated expectations, each and every one of us is at least a touch more boring than our images would indicate.
And that is not a bad thing.
—Fredrick Frankford Fletcher
A Vampire at the Reunion
1.
I was midway through packing when I paused to contemplate whether it was appropriate to bring the blood. I mean, sure I needed it and all, but there’s always been something so garish about pulling a bag of O Negative from my little, leather luggage. I weighed the options for a few moments, pitting my desire for stylish secrecy against my nutritional needs. In the end, I forged a compromise, pouring the blood into my faux silver (obviously the real deal is off limits) flask, sealing it well, then placing it between my freshly pressed shirts.
My name is Fredrick Frankford Fletcher, and yes, that name did get me beaten up quite frequently when I was a child. For those of you who are a little slow on the uptake, I am also a vampire. It was a relatively recent life change. It happened only about one year ago. I’ll spare you the gory details, but one night I was a mild mannered accountant with a heartbeat, and the next night I wasn’t. Oh, I was still a mild mannered accountant, but the heartbeat was long gone. I took it well, I feel, or as well as one can handle such things. I attempted to go hunting and feed; however, while I might have been a fearful predator of the night, I still chafed at the idea of physical violence. I can’t even watch slasher films without covering my eyes. After a few failed feeding fiascos left me leaning toward starvation, I opted to use a different set of my skills to secure sustenance.
John Smith, as I will call him here, was a local hospital director that had paid me to cook his books and keep his failing enterprise above water in previous years. Generally, all criminal activity gives me ulcers, but the cause of keeping a hospital afloat allowed me to feel that the karmic scales balanced out. After my life change, we struck a new deal in which I would offer the same service each year, in exchange for the opportunity to purchase my dinners of choice from his blood supply.
The rest of my lifestyle adaptations were fairly simple. I began having files delivered to my home in the day so I could work on them at night, I refitted my refrigerator for a predominantly liquid diet, and I resumed my life as it was. I was even able to continue indulging my penchant for fine cheeses, despite what voluminous lore had told me. Without being crass, let me simply say an undead body handles normal food as a human one handles gum. While not built for nourishment, it is capable of disposing of such materials. This was far from the first discrepancy I uncovered in my cinema-based education.
Perhaps if I had any true friends or family, the transition might very well have been more difficult; however, that was not a burden with which I had been shouldered. My life was just as grey and dull as it had been before.
In a way, that was the most difficult part of my transition, going from the thrill of something new back to the dreariness of the old. I suppose a part of me had believed the Hollywood hype about vampires living (in a non-literal sense, of course) adventurous lives filled with sex, danger, and riches. My own undead experience had been . . . somewhat less thrilling. I’d spent ample time raiding the video stores in my town, and I must say I had yet to uncover any tales of vampires whose unlives continued so perfectly parallel to their day
s of breathing and sunshine as mine did. I would have taken great comfort in such a film. It was that nagging sense of disappointment that toiled away in my subconscious, and it was the need for something—anything really—to be different that prompted me to make such a dangerous decision.
I was going to my ten-year high school reunion. Now, I know that this must seem like an impulsive and idiotic idea, and, in truth, it was. I saw that clearly when the invitation arrived. I recognized it, analyzed it, and catalogued it in my mental filing system as I had done everything else in my monotonous twenty-eight years on this earth. This time though, something caught on the corner of my cranial cabinet, and I saw an opportunity. Here was a chance to take a risk, albeit a small one, and do something that qualified as unsafe. Whimsical even, if one discounted my previous analyzation of the situation. Before I could talk myself out of it, I mailed my confirmation reply and booked a non-refundable ticket to my hometown of Kent, Idaho. It was only later I realized the flight was scheduled during daytime and was therefore useless to me, but the grandness of the gesture remained poignant, and I resolved to attend my reunion anyway.
Some three weeks later, as I packed up my supplies for the weekend to come, I began to wonder if other vampires felt this skittish before seeing people who knew them in life. The only other vampire I had even encountered was the one who turned me, and he was gone before I awoke. I prowled the darkness at first, hoping to find others of my kind, but after a few movies depicting the vampire political system, I started staying in more. I didn’t really have the constitution for such constant subterfuge and betrayal. A pleasant evening with merlot, blood, and brie worked just fine, thank you very much.
I zipped up my bag and hefted it onto my shoulder. This would have been an ordeal in itself three years ago, but with the night hours and the new allergies to garlic, silver, and sunshine came a few undeniable perks. Eternal life was pleasant enough I suppose, though I’d become concerned about what I would do once I finished viewing every movie in the rental store. At least I might be around long enough to truly enjoy the appreciation of my smarter financial investments. The enhanced strength, durability, and dexterity were all quite nice, though. I was more than a minor klutz in my human days, so it was an enjoyable change to walk around without injuring myself.
After locking my door and setting my alarms, I stepped into the new night air. It was crisp with the chill of late October. Admittedly a strange time for a high school reunion, but Kent was a farming community. The fall holidays were close to harvest time, and therefore the heaviest celebrated. For those of you fortunate enough to not understand that reference, harvest time is one of the hardest working periods on a farm. A night off is not just reason to celebrate; it is reason to celebrate to the umpteenth degree. Since Thanksgiving is spent with family, Kent will often hold its reunions on or around Halloween. This year was my class’s turn, and as Halloween fell on a Saturday, our event was planned for the night of the pumpkin-themed holiday. As a real live (again, only in a matter of speaking) vampire would be in attendance, I felt this was particularly appropriate. Even if I was the only one who would know it.
I loaded the leather suitcase into the back of my grey hybrid. I had always tried to be eco-conscious, but realizing I could actually live to be affected by eventual environmental disasters had doubled my efforts. Once the suitcase was secured, I placed a travel mug of blood into the cup holder and buckled myself in as well. I would have to drive through the night to make it to my hotel in time, but that hadn’t been an issue for over a year. If I were still human, I would have taken a deep breath to steel myself for the expected adventure ahead. Since I was not, I checked my mirrors and turned on my signal, pulling into the road with both hands firmly on the wheel.
2.
I made it to the hotel approximately an hour before the sun would crest the western horizon. Almanacs were never something I gave much thought to before my change. Now they were like credit cards; I never went anywhere without one.
Check-in was a simple process. An advantage of my timing was that none of the other alumni were entering at that time. They had either come earlier or would be showing up during the day. That was well and good for me; I had neither desire nor intention of seeing them outside of the controlled environment that the reunion would offer. Less chance of anyone remembering favorite old games of beating me up or throwing me naked into the girl’s locker room. Just the memories were giving me a stress headache, if I were still susceptible to them.
I received my key packet from a girl working the front counter and ventured up to my room. Once there I opened my suitcase and pulled out my safety materials. I had several rolls of tinfoil and tape. It took me only twenty minutes to seal off every possible venue the sun might utilize to enter my room. That was one skill sheer survival had forced me to practice at length.
I gently removed my costume from the suitcase and began shaking out the obvious wrinkles. Yes, since we were having the reunion on Halloween, it had been designated a costume party. My costume was a set of scrubs and a white doctor’s coat. Now, I’m sure some of you will wonder why I didn’t simply throw on black clothing and bill myself as a vampire. The sad truth was that I looked precious little like an undead demon of the night. Granted, the dying had slimmed me down and taken away my need for glasses, but I still had the same mousy brown hair, round face, and unappealing arrangement of features I’d always been cursed with. I’d already favored a pale complexion, so that difference was scarcely noticeable. My fangs only extended themselves if I was feeding, exceptionally hungry, or . . . um . . . ah . . . otherwise excited, to put it properly. It also didn’t help that I almost immediately took to wearing fake glasses with similar frames after the change. It might not seem rational, but after twenty-five years, they were as much a part of my face as the eyes they stood in front of, and I couldn’t bear to part with them.
All of that reasoning aside, the point of a Halloween costume is to be something you are not. Since I was a vampire, that would have been cheating. At least that’s how I rationalized it to myself as I ironed my costume and hung it in the hotel closet. I did a few shirts next, making certain I would have appropriate clothing to wear on my return drive Sunday night. There was really no rush; I had gotten a week ahead on my work so that I could spend a few more days here if the desire struck me. I couldn’t possibly conceive of a reason why that desire would strike me. I had left this town as fast as my awkward human legs would carry me, but it was my understanding that impulsive people were given to inclinations such as that. This weekend, if never again, I was determined to be impulsive. Or as impulsive as a vampire with four clean pairs of clothes and a four-day supply of blood can be.
I settled into the bed and turned on the television. Contrary to popular mythology, I neither sleep in a coffin, nor am I rendered powerless during the daytime. The difference between the two is that in the daytime I can sleep, which is an ability I lack under starlight. I don’t have to, and in fact spent three weeks without any rest during last year’s tax season; however, I am a creature of habit as much as of the night. I slept my whole life. I saw no compelling reason to change that in my undead incarnation. I switched through the channels until I was satisfied that there was nothing worth staying up for. I then set my alarm for 5 o’clock sharp and put in a wake-up call for the same time. The reunion began at 7 p.m., and sunset was at 7:17 p.m. This way I had ample time to shower, get into my costume, and enjoy some blood before heading into the night. I didn’t really need to drink every night; twice a week would serve my needs quite well. However, I have a tendency to stress eat, which caused my human form to become somewhat doughy in the first place. The effects weren’t quite so negative this time. I simply increased my blood bill for the month.
I could tell the sun had risen by the time on my clock. My foil shielding had worked flawlessly, and not a speck of light leaked through. With a minor expenditure of effort, I pushed my mind away from consciousness and into what was, I
assumed, the vampiric equivalent of an REM cycle.
3.
I must admit, my former academic colleagues were quite adept and varied in their costume conceptions. The only rules of the evening were that one could not cover one’s face, which served to fuel the creative fires in fashioning a functional costume, and that a visible nametag was required all night. The latter of those two killed any sense of realism I might have felt while staring at Anne Boleyn, Elvis, or Jake Blues. My doctor garb was relatively untainted by the cheap tag. I had read the invitation carefully and therefore procured a name-badge holder that real doctors use and slipped the identifying piece of plastic inside. There are times when it pays to be careful and prepared.
As I slunk, for lack of a better word, around the cheaply decorated cafeteria, I found myself taken aback at the changes that had clearly not taken place in my fellow Kent High alumni. Near the entrance sat a fairy princess in a low cut top: Joyce Trainer, homecoming queen turned mother of four. To the human eye, she appeared a miracle, still firm, fit, and perky even after four rounds with hormones and weight gain. She was significantly less miraculous to me, since I could actually smell the plastic and Botox that riddled her body. Ah, the crux of vanity. The upside of never having good looks was that I didn’t have to fear losing them with age. Pity I wasn’t pretty though; then they would have kept for eternity. Although for all I know, I wouldn’t have been bitten if I were good looking, so I suppose there’s no sense second-guessing fate.
Brent Colter, one of many of my school-day bullies, was standing near the refreshment table, romancing a collection of former co-eds whose names I couldn’t recall. His cheap Spartan costume covered him fully, but it was tight enough that his frame was hardly obscured. His former football-player’s physique had softened around the edges, but as the ladies’ attention indicated, he was still a broad-shouldered, muscular man. I felt mildly disappointed; I was hoping he would devolve into full blown obesity, but I suppose ten years is a little soon to expect age to have caught up to him so severely. It dawned on me that I wouldn’t be able to attend many more of these. Sooner or later someone would notice that the rest of the class was growing older, while dear Fredrick stayed frozen in his mid-twenties. Brent was clearly aging though, which was pleasant to see in my former tormentor. I was hopeful that I could visit him in the nursing home one day, and rub in that I was still young and fit while he had grown weak and decrepit. Assuming I could find time to keep track of him, of course . . . and only if I could be assured he wouldn’t spill my secret to others . . . and if it wasn’t during tax season.