Read Undead and Unwelcome Online
Authors: MaryJanice Davidson
lurking in the back were lime, juniper, peppercorn, espresso, fennel, mint, garlic, cherry,
sun-dried tomato, mustard seed, apple, and horseradish.
Dude, I am not making this up,
or exaggerating for humorous effect. In a household of oddities and the undead, Tina
was everywhere and nowhere. She excelled at going unnoticed and she could pull that off
anywhere in the world . . . except our kitchen freezer. Vodka was her vice; the more
obscure the flavor, the more she had to try it. She drank it neat, using a succession of
antique shot glasses, which were always kept chilled.
Tina had offered to make me a
drink once. I had accepted. Once.
I did not have time to swing by Cub on the way to work
and would be too tired after my shift; time to order pizza again. Green Mill was
practically on my speed dial.
Sighing, I swung the freezer shut and my senses, instantly
overwhelmed by someone they hadn’t smelled, seen, or heard, but who was all of a
sudden
right there,
went into overdrive. My adrenal gland dumped a gallon of F.O.F. into
my system (what my interns called Fight or Flight juice) and for a long minute I thought
my heart was going to just quit from the shock.
She greeted me with “I am out of
cinnamon vodka,” then grabbed my shoulder and prevented me from braining myself on
the metal handle as I flinched hard enough to be mistaken for an epileptic.
“Tina,” I
groaned, yanking my hand out of her chilly grasp, “that’s the second time today. I’m
putting a bell around your neck. Or sewing one into your scalp, I swear to—” No, don’t
swear to God; just hearing the
G
word was like a whiplash to a vampire, the movies had
gotten
some
things right. “I swear,” I finished.
Tina looked mildly distressed. Most of
her expressions were mild versions of what humanity could come up with. What would put
you or me in a killing rage would cause her to raise one eyebrow and frown. Frown
sternly
, but still.
The smooth efficiency and profound, almost unshakable calm were at
odds with her appearance. Tina looked like an escapee from Delta Nu, the sorority Reese
Witherspoon’s character made famous in
Legally Blonde.
(Great movie, dude. “All those
opposed to chafing, please say aye.”)
Tina had long, honey blond hair—past her
shoulders in rippling waves—and big, dark eyes, what Tina called pansy eyes. Not only
did Tina look too young to vote, she would probably get carded if she tried to buy
cigarettes. And she dressed to play up her appearance in a never-ending variety of kicky
plaid skirts, white button-downs, anklets, everything but a backpack full of high school
textbooks. She looked like a walking, talking felony. One far older and smarter than any
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would-be college boy who might try out a little date rape.
Also, she was about as noisy as
an unplugged television. If you don’t believe that, dude, you couldn’t feel my heart just
now.
“I apologize, Marc. I honestly don’t mean to frighten you.” This was true, and
scary in its own way—I hated to think what she could do to my nervous system if she
really put some thought into it. “We’re just two peas rattling around in a can ’round
here, aren’t we?”
She laughed a little and I noticed she had slipped again. Most of the
time, Tina had the smooth, accent-free tones of a weather reporter. But occasionally a
Southern accent would creep in. I loved it when that happened because she seemed less a
smooth-voiced butler and more like a walking, talking, feeling person.
Don’t
misunderstand; I have no problem with the undead, although I was dying to learn all I
could and trying to work up the nerve to ask Betsy if I could autopsy the next Big Bad she
would inadvertently kill with a heretofore unknown superpower. Nope; no real problem
with them, I just thought they should get back to their roots a bit more often.
Besides,
Tina made me nervous.
And she knew she made me nervous. This was nothing I could
discuss with Betsy, of course . . . my feelings were too vague and unformed and frankly,
my best gal wasn’t what I would ever call a deep thinker. As Susan Sarandon said in the
greatest movie in the history of cinema,
Bull Durham
, “The world is made for people who
aren’t cursed with self-awareness.” The world was made, in other words, for people like
Betsy.
She had no time for “Hmm, Tina’s a quiet one, huh? Perhaps we should ponder
what that signifies,” particularly during the fall when she had to update her collection of
winter footgear. But it was there and I couldn’t deny it: Tina gave me the creeps.
I knew
she had been born the year the Civil War had begun.
I knew she had been a vampire long
before Sinclair.
I knew she had made Sinclair, had remained by his side all the years
since then, and was his capable assistant.
And that was all I knew about her. And I only
knew those things because Betsy had told me. In other words, that was all
Betsy
knew
about her, too. And
she
was the queen, for the love of . . .
Dude, there are all sorts of
etiquette rules for living with vampires. There had to be; there was etiquette for
everything. But it was hard to come up with a tactful way to ask, “So, how’d you get
murdered, anyway?” And that was only one of the things I would love to learn.
All this
went through my head in about eleven seconds. Meanwhile, Tina was still lurking—well,
standing—by the fridge.
“Will you have a drink with me?” She opened the freezer and
reached for the first row of bottles. I saw she had extracted mustard seed-flavored vodka
and, thanks to years of seeing man’s inhumanity to man via the emergency room, I
manfully concealed my shudder.
“I have to get to work,” I said glumly.
Curious, I waited
a beat, but Tina did exactly what I anticipated. “Oh, that’s too bad, Marc. A pity you
won’t have time to shop first.”
Dude, if I had been Sinclair or Betsy, her answer would
have been something like, “Oh most wondrous undead monarch, please give me, your
humblest, lamest, most slovenly servant, your grocery list and I shall fill your fridge with
any produce, meat by-products, Little Debbie snack cakes, and dairy products you desire
and also pick up your dry cleaning on my way home, unless you would prefer I simply
run out to KFC for some original recipe chicken.”
Alas, it was not to be: not only was I
alive and well, I was neither the vampire queen nor the vampire king. Tina was
their
willing and untiring slave, not mine.
Still, we
were
roommates. You would think that
would lead to some kind of bond. The Sacred Roommate Bond. Would it kill her to bring
home a gallon of milk once in a while?
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Chapter 11
The words
wife
or
queen
seemed almost to hang in the air over our heads. I had the sense
that they weren’t asking these questions out of idle curiosity, or to be polite. No, no.
Michael was a predator, of course, as Antonia had been, which meant he was constantly
on the lookout for weakness. He couldn’t help it. Probably he didn’t even know he was
doing it. Wife or queen? A question I had asked myself on more than one occasion.
Sinclair was bigger, stronger, faster. Older. Richer. Better educated. More even-tempered,
more in control. Frankly, there were times—lots of times—when I wished I could just be
the wife, and leave the whole vamp royalty thing to him. But I could do things no other
vampire on the planet could. Seemed dumb not to take advantage of that, or at least
acknowledge it. So we existed in an interesting state of love and respect. Well, occasional
respect, when I wasn’t giving him a Wet Willy or poking him in his flat belly when we
showered together—the man wasn’t ticklish! Talk about an unnatural creature. He’d
bowed to my authority on more than one occasion, too—usually just before I started
hurling heavy objects at his head to emphasize whatever point I was making. You want to
see something funny? Eric Sinclair, following one of my orders. Believe me, it didn’t
happen all that often. Whenever it did, he always had an odd expression on his face: part
admiration, part annoyance. Now where the hell was I? Dammit! It was three A.M., I was
tired out from being on edge all night, and was having more trouble than usual following
the conversation, which had veered from funeral rights to religion to atheist vampires to
my title. “Funny thing for
you
to ask, Jeannie,” I finally said. I guess it wasn’t exactly
unheard of for a werewolf to marry a—you know, a regular person. But it was rare
enough so that the two of them caused a stir now and again—I’d gotten that much from
Antonia, and that only after she’d been living with us for a while. Get this: not only was it
rare for werewolves to marry boring old humans, it was considered super-lucky for the
Pack, and the offspring were usually exceptional Pack members. For example, Antonia—
But I wasn’t ready to go there again. Call me a chickenshit coward; that’s fine. I just
couldn’t do it again right now. “Mmm.” Jeannie grinned, but didn’t rise to the bait, just
shrugged. “Good point.” I cleared my throat, because I was having trouble swallowing the
whole—the whole mundaneness of the thing. Mundaneness? Mundanity? “So there are
Presbyterian werewolves, and Catholic ones, and Lutherans—” “And Buddhists and
atheists and Hindus,” Derik added. “Will you please stop that pacing and sit the fuck
down? Ow!” I yanked my poor sore ankle out of reach of Sinclair’s foot. “You look like a
cheetah on crack.” “Back off, blondie,” Derik snapped back and, if anything, sped up the
pacing. “I’m surprised you didn’t draw your own conclusion,” Michael said loudly, clearly
trying to distract us. I think he was clearly trying. It was hard to know
what
the guy was
up to. “Because clearly, all vampires are Christians.” “No,” Sinclair said. No? What, no?
How did we get off the topic of werewolf retribution for Antonia and on to religion? I got
enough of the “let’s all pray to Jesus meek and mild” stuff I needed from Laura. “No?”
“No. We, too, have Muslims and Catholics and pagans. We, too, have—” “Whoa, whoa,
whoa,” Jeannie interrupted. “That makes no sense at all.” “We do not go about our lives
with the objective of making sense to strangers,” my husband said with terrifying
pleasantness. “Fuck.” Derik, thank God, had grabbed a chair, dragged it over, turned it so
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) it was facing backward, and sat. His blond hair fell into his eyes and he shook it out of his
face with a quick, impatient movement. “Why would a cross work on an atheist vampire?”
Sinclair and I traded a glance. Jessica, I noticed, was all ears as well—she’d been so quiet
I’d almost forgotten she was in the room. “Or someone Jewish?” Derik continued.
Because vampirism was a virus. A virus that was very hard to catch, and even harder to
pass on. This was Marc’s theory, backed up by Tina and Sinclair—again, not all of a
sudden. After months and months and months. Tina and Sinclair couldn’t be much more
tight-mouthed if someone sewed their lips shut with ultralite fishing line. Vampirism, as a
virus, slowed your metabolism waaaaay down, but didn’t stop it. Good points: you no
longer sweated, or peed. Aging seemed to stop altogether. You were faster, stronger.
Heightened senses. Blah-blah. Bad points: vampires were highly susceptible to suggestion.
(All of them—modest cough—except me.) Tina, my husband’s right-hand woman (she
had been the one to turn him into a vampire in the early part of the twentieth century . . .
yup, I was in love and regularly boinking a man old enough to be my grandfather), had
eventually advanced this theory with Marc. Marc went into MD mode and had tentatively
concurred (on the grounds that he could change his mind if further proof emerged) that
yes, it was a virus, and yes, a Jewish vampire would cringe away from a cross. Because we
all know that’s what vampires do.
They
are vampires;
ergo,
crosses and holy water can
hurt them. I know, sounds stupid, right? Give it a minute. If you catch a disease that
makes you highly suggestible, and you have the weight of a zillion horror movies telling
you holy water burns . . . then holy water burns. But we were getting off the point. And it