To Walk the Night (4 page)

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Authors: E. S. Moore

Tags: #Fantasy, #Vampires, #Adult

BOOK: To Walk the Night
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“They worship werewolves,” I said, turning back to Ethan. I didn’t trust the Cult, didn’t trust myself. What would I do if this whole thing was legit? Could I actually walk into the Den of a bunch of werewolf worshippers?
“There is something wrong with people who would want to run around with monsters like that. I don’t think I could ever trust them.”
He raised his eyebrows and gave me a coy smile. “I’m living with a monster, remember.”
“That’s different.” I wasn’t so sure how. Just because I didn’t give in to my darker nature as willingly and as easily as the next vamp didn’t make me any less a monster. What happened in the basement was more than proof enough for that.
“Is it?” Ethan shrugged. “I honestly think you should see what the Cult wants. I figure if it’s some sort of trap, you could easily overcome a few Pureblood humans. Just don’t go in unprepared. Take your gear, be ready for a fight.”
“I never leave my weapons behind.”
“I know,” Ethan said. He stifled a yawn. “Think about what I said. I’m going to get to work on your stuff, make sure it’s ready in case you decide to take them up on their offer.”
I nodded. “Okay,” I said. “But get some sleep soon. You look tired.”
“I will.” He stretched and headed for the door. His shoulders were sagging and I knew he wouldn’t be able to work much longer. He was pushing himself too hard.
I remained sitting on my bed for a good hour before finally getting up and closing my bedroom door. The sun was up. I could feel it through the walls. I double-checked the layers of drapes over the window, and satisfied, returned to my bed.
I curled up on the covers and stared at the ceiling. I was confused, unsure what path I should take. Deciding whether to kill a vampire enslaving and killing Purebloods by the dozens doesn’t take much thought. Deciding whether I should go in and have a sit-down with a bunch of crazies who would rather be one of the monsters than stay human was taking it a bit far.
I closed my eyes, wishing I could fall asleep and let everything drift away. If I was lucky, things would sort themselves out while I was oblivious.
But that wouldn’t happen. The Purebloods had closed their eyes to what was happening around them, and look where it has gotten them. They live in fear of the night, afraid to so much as leave their houses unless the sun is shining full in their faces.
Of course, it isn’t just the vampires they have to worry about. There are any number of Purebloods who are just as dangerous as the vampires and werewolves and other supernatural beings that slither through the night’s shadows.
A vampire isn’t inherently evil. A werewolf isn’t either. The capacity for evil is within everyone, whether they are a literal monster or not. Some just try harder to follow the right path than others.
I was beginning to wonder which path I was actually on.
4
 
I was up and dressed at dusk. I paused at Ethan’s bedroom door and listened. He was snoring lightly on the other side. I waited there, my hand resting against the closed door. He had stayed up far too long, I was sure of it. He was normally up at first dark.
“Stay safe,” I whispered, and hurried down the stairs.
I threw my leather coat on over my jeans and T-shirt, and headed down into the basement. I wasn’t planning on working tonight, but I wanted to be prepared. Like most nights, it was always better to be ready for a fight than to go out unprepared.
I grabbed my sword, sheathed it, and took down a belt fit with a pair of silver knives from the wall. The gun I had used the previous night was down there now, cleaned, and fresh clips lay beside it. I holstered the gun, strapped on the belt, and pocketed a pair of silver-dust packets.
I might have looked like I was going out to war. I was simply going out for drinks.
I paused upstairs in the kitchen, hand on the side door. I was leaving Ethan alone, leaving him while he was defenseless and asleep. A Cultist had gotten in the night before. What was to stop them from coming back to see what had happened to their friend?
I considered staying, at least until Ethan was awake, but changed my mind. Staying would be admitting it wasn’t safe, that this sanctuary I had built for myself wasn’t strong.
Ethan could take care of himself. He was strong, resourceful. If the Luna Cult really wanted something from me, I doubted they would send anyone else. If they really wanted to meet with me, I was sure they would know not to press.
I stepped out into the garage, putting my fears behind me. Within moments, I had the Honda started and was shooting down the road.
The landscape shot by, a blur just on the edge of my vision. I had driven the route so long, I knew where every pothole was, every turn in the road.
I tore through a small shopping district that was closed up tight. Not even the gas station stayed open this late. It was Pureblood country, one of the few places where vampires and werewolves had no place. The Purebloods were all tucked safely away in their homes, praying they would see the morning come, and life could go on like normal.
I put the closed shops, the darkened windows behind me, longing for that kind of life. I never had the chance to live a life like that. I was born to the dark, and in the dark I would stay.
It took a good thirty minutes to reach my destination and by then, I was ready for that drink.
The Bloody Stake was located in a part of the city only the insane dared to walk. Dim streetlights illuminated the sidewalk where prowlers were often seen drifting in and out of the darkness. Werewolves and vampires both came to hunt here, but they were far from the only predators. Purebloods made their own kills in the darkened streets and side alleys. They struck out at the monsters just as often as the monsters struck out at them.
The bar looked pretty much like any other dive from the outside, which helped it fit in nicely with the rest of the neighborhood. Cheap neon signs flickered on and off, advertising beer as cheap as the signs themselves. The stained curtains were nearly always drawn. They were covered in so many bodily fluids, they probably qualified as a crime scene. The shingles on the roof looked as though they had needed replacing ten years ago.
All of that was for show. It might look as though The Bloody Stake was going to fall in at any time, but for those who were brave enough to step through the doors, it served as a safe haven where Purebloods and monsters alike could coexist without fear of the hunt.
Inside, the place was well maintained and well-lit. The bar was always polished to a shine. Peanuts awaited customers who sat on the soft-cushioned stools. The tables were sturdy, bolted to the floor, and the chairs around them were surprisingly comfortable.
Not only that, but the food was good, the beer topnotch, and if you could stomach the less-than-human patrons, the atmosphere was surprisingly pleasant.
Bart Miller ran The Bloody Stake with an iron fist. He was tough as leather and looked the part of a street brawler. The bar had simply been named Bart’s at one time, but when the vampires and wolves rose, he changed the name to The Bloody Stake as a kind of big “fuck you” to the vamps who had taken control of the streets. The name might be outdated now that knowledge of vampires was more well-known, but it still got the point across.
It took time, but a lot of the myths surrounding supernaturals had long been disproved. Garlic is just as tasty on a vampire’s pizza as it is on a Pureblood’s. Running water, holy water, or any sort of water outside of sewer water doesn’t bother a vamp in the slightest. There are more than a few Christian vampires as well. They wear their crosses on their necks, carry their Bibles, and pray just like everyone else—even if they do so with blood on their lips more often than not.
Then there is the whole coffin thing. Vampires sleep on beds just like anyone else. Well, maybe not exactly sleep. Vampires don’t need to sleep, but they do need to rest their bodies. Vampires aren’t the undead of legend. They don’t rise from their graves or any such nonsense. They are living beings just like the next human, though their blood is tainted.
In fact, vampires are just another kind of shapeshifter, like werewolves. They live longer, their lives extended by something in their blood, and the change isn’t as complete as with a werewolf, but they are a shifter just the same. Some vampires have mastered the ability to change into another animal entirely, but they are few and far between.
Werewolves have their own set of myths to contend with. The biggest is, of course, the whole full moon thing. A werewolf can shift whenever it chooses. It doesn’t matter if the moon is full, at half, or new. That’s not to say they aren’t weakened during the new moon. They are. Just like vampires gain strength at the apex of the night, werewolves become stronger closer to the full moon, their blood lust more powerful.
But that lust comes with a cost. Just like the tides react to the moon, so do people and animals. Purebloods tend to get a little kooky during the full moon. Murders, burglaries, and violence rise. Vampires have a harder time controlling their hunger and oftentimes find themselves feeding without knowing who they are feeding on.
Werewolves, on the other hand, go utterly mad.
It is called the Full Moon Madness. That is as technical a term as anyone has ever given it. Anyone who savors their skin stays inside during the full moon. Doors and windows are bolted. Lights are left off, and any sort of movement that might be seen or heard from the outside ceases.
The Madness wipes away any reservations about killing a werewolf might have. Wolves who had never hunted before would kill their mothers in a fit of rage. Wives turn on husbands, friend on neighbor, brother on sister.
It was a bloodbath waiting to happen and it was only a few nights away.
I parked my Honda in the small parking lot at the side of The Bloody Stake. The sign over the bar showed a scantily clad woman kneeling over a vampire dressed like Bela Lugosi in all those old Dracula movies. She had an oversized stake in her hand, and she swung it slowly up and down, repeatedly staking the silly-looking vamp in a flash of red neon blood.
I made my way to the entrance, smiling at the sign. Somehow, it always made me smile, despite the ridiculousness of it. Something about the threat it implied gave me a warm fuzzy feeling, even though a good number of the patrons would give anything to stake me the moment they found out I was a card-carrying vamp.
Bart was behind the bar like always. A scar ran down the right side of his face, a product of a fight that had ended with a couple of vaporized vamps and the corpse of the girl who had been playing one against the other. He nodded to me and went to fetch me a beer without waiting for me to ask.
I paused just inside the door and scanned the room, checking to make sure there was no trouble waiting for me. I didn’t exactly have a lot of friends with the way I lived my life. The Bloody Stake was usually safe for everyone, but like what had happened to give Bart his scar, things did happen.
Mikael Engelbrecht, a Swedish man who had moved to the States for no better reason than to experience the women, sat in a corner with three girls draped all over him. None of the girls could be older than eighteen, and I had a feeling a couple of them were well under. They fawned over him, touching and caressing him like he was some sort of soft, cuddly animal.
Mikael gave me the slightest of nods, his slicked-back hair shining in bar lights. One of the girls glanced over at me, frowned, and then kissed him square on the lips. The other two quickly followed suit.
My eyes skimmed over them as I checked the rest of the bar. As far as I could tell, Mikael was the most dangerous person in the place, myself excluded. Thankfully, I counted him amongst my friends in an odd, “don’t talk, don’t tell” sort of way.
Mikael is a snitch. There is no glossing over it, and he would be offended if you tried. I got all my information on the vampire Houses from him. While he might look and act like scum, he was pretty loyal to his paying customers. He would never give me away, even if he really knew who I was.
I returned his nod, though he was too engrossed with the three girls’ tongues to notice. I gave him a disgusted look and then headed to the bar where my beer was waiting.
I usually sat at one of the booths in the darkest corner of the room, but The Bloody Stake was crowded tonight. A pair of young couples were sitting at my usual table, laughing and rubbing up against each other like they were somewhere a lot more private. One guy was working his hand up his girl’s skirt and she was doing nothing to stop him.
“I can move ’em,” Bart said, leaning on the bar. “They’ve been here long enough, distracting anyone with a pair of eyes.”
“It’s okay,” I said. “I just want to sit back and relax for a little bit. It’s been a rough couple of nights.”
Bart grunted and moved off to wait on someone at the far end of the bar. He favored his right leg as he moved—the result of yet another encounter with a less than friendly vamp. It was a wonder he could walk at all with as many fights as he has broken up over the years.
I turned in my seat so I could get a better look around the room. There was a mix of vamps, wolves, and Purebloods, though I couldn’t pick the supes out just by looks. It was usually pretty hard to tell unless someone was going hairy or teeth were sprouting.
There
was
an old guy sitting at a table against the wall who had a certain look about him that screamed supernatural. He was trying to hide the hunger burning in his eyes, but he was having a hard time of it. From the awkward way he moved and the way he couldn’t hide his desire to feed, I guessed he either was pretty damn hungry or was new. He had probably been a bum some young vamp or wolf had turned on accident.
I watched him a moment, wondering if he would give in to his hunger, before finally turning away. If he did, he wouldn’t be the first to do so, though it would be in the world’s worst place.
While The Bloody Stake catered to everyone, regardless of blood, there was one big no-no that everyone had to follow: There was to be no fighting within the bar or within sight of Bart’s property. I had seen more than one vampire lose his head when he couldn’t control his hunger.
And that went for the Purebloods as much as it did for the vamps and wolves. Bart had no qualms about putting someone down who threatened the peace of his establishment. If you came here, you had to be prepared to behave, or else you would be leaving in pieces.
It was part of the charm of the place, really. It was somewhere I could go without having to constantly look over my shoulder. Sure, fights did happen, but Bart usually ended them before anyone got hurt. It might not make much of a difference if someone was to plunge a silver knife through my heart or blow my brains out through my eye sockets, but at least whoever did it would end up with their blood splattered on the opposite wall a second or two later.
Besides, most of the people knew each other by sight here. Rarely were names exchanged; but if someone new were to come in, they were watched by the regulars well enough so that the risks were relatively low. No one here knew my name, knew what I did by night. Not even Bart or Mikael knew anything about me, aside from the fact I was a vampire. They were the only two in the place who knew that for sure.
I finished my beer and set it down, tapping it twice on the bar to let Bart know I was ready for another.
One of the girls at my old booth rose, her voice rising in anger. She slapped a hand from her hip and started for the door, ignoring the whine of the boy she had rejected. Her other two companions were still hanging on to each other like they were glued together. The boy’s hand was so far up the girl’s skirt now, I knew her sudden jerks and giggles weren’t caused by a sudden chill.
A middle-aged woman sitting close to the door grabbed the fleeing young girl by the arm and yanked her into the chair next to her. She leaned forward and said something to the girl that sounded harsh and demanding. The girl paled, looked around the room at all the eager faces, and then stood, thanked the woman, and sulked back toward the booth. She sat down next to the oblivious couple, well away from the boy she had been sitting with originally.

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