No Man's Land (15 page)

Read No Man's Land Online

Authors: Debra Dunbar

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Urban, #fantasy humor, #werewolf, #paranormal romance, #contemporary fantasy, #vampire, #Lesbian Romance, #urban fantasy

BOOK: No Man's Land
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Kelly felt the hair rise on the back of her neck as she checked five traps. There was a faint, old smell of vampire, and not one from her family either. The light dusting of snow had diluted the scent, though, and she couldn’t tell if it was carried on the wind from a distance, or just faded from the weather. She paused, closing her eyes and inhaling deeply, but finally gave up trying to pinpoint the smell. Hopefully Jaq was having better luck.

It was disheartening to find the five traps untouched. She sucked at this. She was trained as a business manager, not a survivalist. The closest she’d come to this skill was as a human when one of the footmen had taught her to steal, and pick locks.

Going to the location of the sixth rat trap, Kelly frowned. It was gone. Leaves had been scraped to the side leaving a patch of cleared dirt; branches were broken as if there had been some sort of struggle where she and Jaq had placed the trap. Looking for the trap in an expanding circular search grid, she finally found it smashed to small bits a few feet from where it had been placed. She shook her head as she examined the broken splinters of wood and twisted metal wires. This didn’t look like a large animal had been caught and thrown the trap off. It looked like a large animal had been caught and smashed the trap in a fit of rage. Human? How embarrassing it would be if one of her neighbors had gotten caught in her trap.

Carefully she picked up the wood and metal pieces, easily visible to her night vision. One had a spot of blood. She scrutinized the spot and licked it. Not that she thought she’d recognize the victim. As soon as the wood touched her tongue, she recoiled in surprise, spitting to rid her mouth of the taste. It wasn’t human: it was vampire. And whoever this vampire was, he wasn’t her family. His smell matched the faint odor she’d picked up at the first trap. Kelly held still, every muscle tense as she searched the woods carefully. This was dangerously close to her trailer. She’d hoped to take a scout by surprise, but could it be that her presence had been discovered? Was
she
now the hunted?

Concentrating, she sniffed around, specifically on the area that had been disturbed. There was nothing to reveal where the vampire had gone, or how long ago he’d passed through. The most telling thing she discovered was the lack of an aura. Whoever this was, he was a New, and mostly likely a scout.

A spy. A scout. Right near her trailer. How long had they been coming here? How long had they known about her? When did they plan to ambush her? To kill her? Damn. First she lost her method of feeding, and now this. What a night this turned out to be. Heading back toward her trailer, she once again thought through her options. She could leave. Take the twenty she had to her name, and a duffle bag of her scant belongings, and move in further from the border. Hope that her family didn’t take exception to her move.

Kelly shook her head, willing the paranoia to go away. Jaq lived here too. If this scout had been watching her, the other woman would have known and most likely would have already taken his head off. No, this had to have been a coincidence. Or if not, the vampire had only just discovered her. She still had time, as long as she could catch him before he alerted his entire family.

He’d managed to get caught in a rat trap. She chuckled at the thought. The vampire had clearly lost his temper, too. No control at all. Idiot. She could take him. If she could catch him, that is, especially if she had Jaq the Mighty Werewolf by her side.

A twig snapped, and Kelly whirled about, jumping as she saw Jaq standing two feet behind her, arms crossed. Sheesh, that woman was quiet.

“Sheesh, you’re deaf. A herd of elephants could have plowed you over and you wouldn’t have noticed.”

That was a gross exaggeration. Her hearing and all of her other senses were exceptional. She’d just been momentarily lost in thought, slightly panicked at the idea of an enemy vampire so near her home.

“Did you see this?” Kelly shoved the damaged trap at Jaq. The other woman took it, sniffing it before nodding.

“He was gone by the time I got here. I tracked him to the Virginia border, but he’d already crossed.”

Even in the dark, Kelly could see Jaq was worried. “Do you think he knows I’m here?”

“If you could smell him, then he sure as heck could smell you. I’m just hoping with the snow, he wasn’t able to pinpoint exactly where you’ve been staying, or if you’re still here or not.”

“Plus you said he went straight back to Virginia. Not toward Maryland like the others?”

Jaq nodded. “Fast too.”

Kelly felt a twinge of panic. She should leave — move somewhere else in case the vampire came back with reinforcements, but then could her family find her to collect the information? She had no way of contacting them to let them know.

“You know, this guy’s a bit of a moron getting himself caught in a rat trap,” Jaq commented, turning the damaged piece of wood over in her hands. “I’m thinking we put something a bit bigger out here and we might catch him. It’s easier to have him come to us than try and run him down across the state.”

Kelly was doubtful. “I don’t know. Unless you’ve got a bunch of silver weapons around, it’s not likely to work. Box traps or snares, no matter how big or strong they are, aren’t going to hold a vampire,.”

Jaq grinned, pocketing the damaged trap. “Well, it’s a good thing I’m not too attached to my jewelry then, is it?”

17

K
elly crawled out of bed in the late afternoon and showered to get ready for her first day of waitressing at Dale’s, cursing Jaq under her breath the whole time. They’d both been out in the forest until past dawn setting up a variety of traps to hopefully injure and slow down any vampires approaching near the trailers. Kelly had been concerned the neighbors might get caught in them, but the other woman quickly assured her that no one but her or Mike entered the woods — and Mike would recognize the traps before he got close enough to set one off.

So now the vampire faced an evening of waitressing, followed by more trap setting and hunting enemy scouts. There’d been no time to iron the black skirt and pink–stained shirt, and her expensive shoes were a wreck. With any luck, this Dale guy would toss her out for improper clothing and she could spend the day doing something useful — something that would expedite her acceptance back into her family. Kelly frowned as she pulled on the skirt, a fresh wave of irritation at her friend washing over her. What was Jaq
thinking
getting this job for her? She had no time for this. And the ever–present gnawing hunger deep inside was becoming insistent.

At least there was one good thing about this ridiculous job. She’d get tips. Hopefully enough for a bus fare somewhere where she could accost a human and take what she desperately needed without the neighborhood werewolf watch patrol being any wiser. Bus fare, a meal, and maybe some clothing that actually fit, as well as more appropriate footwear for her new, hopefully temporary, lifestyle.

Kelly looked at herself in the tiny bathroom mirror, smoothing the skirt and checking her hair. She was thinner than when she’d been in Atlantic City, and the skirt was in danger of spinning around her hips. She’d never been busty, but the shirt hung on her like she was an adolescent. People would begin to wonder if she kept losing weight in spite of the huge quantities of food she consumed. If things didn’t change soon, that Melody woman would probably drag her off for an intervention, accuse her of having some eating disorder. Which she did, sort of.

At least her face and body had healed. Kelly opened her mouth and examined the spots where her fangs should have been. They were still empty sockets. It wasn’t like she’d expected any different.

“Hurry up in there. You’ll be late,” Jaq called, rapping on the trailer door before barging in.

Kelly grumbled, glaring at the other woman as she walked right on into the bathroom. There was no privacy with anyone around here. She could have been taking a number two on the toilet and Melody would have no qualms about walking right on in and discussing a recipe for baked chicken. Jaq was just the same.

“I
am
hurrying.” This was a good as she was going to get — blood–stained shirt, loose skirt, and shoes that were beginning to look like she’d stolen them off a hobo.

“Here.” Jaq thrust a folded ten dollar bill into Kelly’s hand. “Dale doesn’t provide his staff with free meals, so you’ll need lunch money. Well, supper money actually. It’s too late for lunch, isn’t it?”

Kelly stared down at the money, once again thinking how surreal the last few days had been. This conversation was no exception.

“I don’t …I can pack something. Here, take this back.”

She shouldn’t care. Jaq and the humans had already given her so much that ten dollars shouldn’t matter, but it bothered her. Jaq refused to take the money, waving Kelly’s hands aside, and blocking them when she tried to put the folded bill in her pocket.

“Call it a loan, then. You can pay me back in a few weeks, or once you’re back on your feet. It’s no big deal.”

The werewolf turned to leave, and Kelly chased after her, half running to keep up with Jaq’s long stride.

“It
is
a big deal,” she insisted. “I don’t borrow money.”

Jaq opened the door and turned to her with a grin. “You do now. Look, you’ll need stuff like underwear and make–up. You wear make–up, don’t you? You seem like the kind of girl who would wear make–up, but maybe vampires don’t. And you definitely need underwear. Anyway, just let me know and I’ll loan you more. Bank of Jaq, that’s me.”

Kelly’s mouth dropped open and she stood like an idiot, ten dollar bill in her hand, staring at Jaq. Yes, she wore make–up sometimes. And underwear? She’d been commando after realizing that none of her loaner clothing included undergarments. How had Jaq known that?

“See you tonight after work,” Jaq said, ruffling Kelly’s hair before disappearing through the doorway.

Crazy. They were all crazy here. Kelly smoothed down her dark locks and pocketed the ten dollars. It was a loan. If she made anything in tips tonight, it would go to pay the werewolf back. There was no way she was going to be beholden to anybody.

****

Dale’s was a typical roadside tavern, heavy on the wood décor and beer signs. There was a pool table, a dart board off to the side, and thirty or so tables in addition to a bar that spanned half the width of the restaurant. The door chimed as she walked in, and the man she’d seen in the truck the first day looked up from behind the bar. He glanced at her from head to toe, frowning as if he was just as displeased by her presence as she was.

“There’s a locker in back for your purse. Tomorrow you need black slacks. There are two Dales’ t–shirts on the desk. If you need more than that, you gotta buy extras at twenty a piece.”

Wow. What a welcome. Kelly had no purse but changed into one of the t–shirts, stuffing the other one and her stained blouse into one of the open lockers. So much for hunting tonight. She was going to have to squeeze in a late–night bus trip to a Walmart for black pants. Fingering the ten Jaq had given her, Kelly frowned. The twenty she had back at the trailer plus any tips she earned should be enough for the bus fare and one pair of pants. Hopefully. Otherwise, there went her vow to pay Jaq back this evening.

Shutting the locker, Kelly walked out, perplexed to see that she and the man were the only ones still there. Where were the other wait staff? The bartender? The cook, for crying out loud? She’d always insisted on promptness from her employees. What was with these werewolves?

The man ignored her and flipped a page on the catalogue. Should she ask him if he was Dale? Or would that make her look even more like an idiot? Shrugging, Kelly walked over and began grabbing ketchup bottles from a shelf under the bar, lining them up on top. A bit of searching revealed an industrial–sized jug of ketchup on a wire rack in the kitchen. Kelly flicked on the grills to warm as she went by and began filling the ketchup containers, wiping them carefully with a clean rag.

“What do ya think you’re doing?” The man asked gruffly, his eyes never leaving the catalog.

“Getting ready to open. I assume you’re Dale. Thank you for giving me a job here.” He
had
taken a chance on her — a vampire of all things in a werewolf establishment. Plush she had no references, no verifiable job experience, nothing beyond Jaq’s recommendation. It was more than Kelly would have done, which made her wonder about how much pull Jaq actually had around here.

Dale grunted. He was a big beefy guy with a red nose and balding head. Kelly bet his cheeks shook when he laughed, although from the look of him right now, she wondered if he ever cracked a smile.

“You looking at new grills?” Kelly asked, leaning over to see the catalog as she lined the saltshakers up on the bar to fill. She knew she was annoying her new boss, but couldn’t help it. The werewolf’s surly silence just begged for idle chit chat.

Dale made a noise somewhere between a laugh and a snort. “Wish I could afford a new grill. I’m looking at security cameras, although those seem to be out of my price range too. Chip down the road just put some in yesterday after that that guy got sliced up in his parking lot. He’ll get a bad reputation with those kinds of fights going on.

Kelly knocked over a salt shaker, catching it in a rush of speed before it hit the floor. Well, there went any further opportunity for her to grab another human outside the strip club. She’d not even thought to look for security cameras. If she wasn’t more careful, she’d be exposed.

Although she might already have been. Had Jaq reported her activity at the strip club to the rest of her pack? Was that what was behind Dale’s comment on the security cameras. She wiped up the spilled salt, and eyed him suspiciously.

Dale had raised his eyebrows at her lightning–quick grab at the saltshaker and scowled. “Luckily the guy lived. Funny that. Broken bottle and a whole lot of blood, but he seemed fine outside a few shallow cuts. And the blood was all his, too. Couldn’t remember a thing beyond some prostitute accosting him outside of his car.”

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