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  • Dark Hunger (A Sable Hart Vampire Slayer Novel Book 2) Page 7

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Page 7


  “Oh,” I said. I know, articulate, aren't I? “How did you grow those wings?”

  I tried to grow some wings. Right then and there. I concentrated real hard, but nothing happened. So I stood up. Roger was looking at me like I was crazy.

  “Can you fly with those wings?”

  “Huh? You have to leave,” he said, and tried to slide around me. Instead, I turned, yanked the door open and marched into his house. That would show him. I heard him groan with frustration. “I told you to stay out.”

  “I asked you some questions, and you aren't answering,” I said over my shoulder. I walked to the middle of his living room and stopped. Looking around, I shook my head woefully. “Men.”

  There wasn't a single thing on the walls. The couch was a threadbare piece that Goodwill would reject. Blue. No other chairs. The TV was a mere nineteen inch model, and not even a HDTV. Nothing fancy. He didn't even have cable, but both Xbox and Gameboy systems were connected. The carpet was worn and a rust colored long shag popular in the seventies, when my parents were kids.

  “You decorated yourself, I see. Who helped you? A Salvation Army Store sales rep?” I said. He came up to loom over me, wings spread wide and menacingly. He was so cute trying to be intimidating. “Are you going to tell me about the wings?”

  I turned to face him. In my four inch heels I was only a little shorter. My face was just inches from his, and I turned on the vampire pheromones. They hit him hard. He swallowed, clearly shaken. Despite his fear, his own pheromones started filling the air as well. In seconds flat we were two very horny vampires.

  “I...I don't...oh,” Roger said as I moved closer, my lips just brushing his chin. I reached out and stroked his chest with both hands, thrilled that his huge bat wings were starting to wrap around us. “You...you kind of look like my friend.”

  “I'm Sabrina's sister,” I said.

  I reached up and caressed his wings, along the bone from his back outward. They were covered in soft, fine black hair. It was no illusion, which some vampires could pull off. Roger had real live wings.

  “She has a sister?” he said. Sabrina never told him she had two sisters? Then his eyes went wide. “Sable Hart! You're Black Heart!”

  “I know,” I said, and grinned evilly. “Can you fly?”

  I had visions of myself flying all around with a set of wings like that. The only thing that kept me from flying everywhere now was the need for clothes. It's hard to be intimidating when naked.

  “Yeah, I can fly.”

  Roger started backing up. I paced him. I backed him right into the couch, and straddled his lap when he fell onto it. He tried to crawl straight back out from under me, but I held him down.

  “No man has ever tried to get away from me like this,” I said. I locked eyes with him, making him freeze like a deer caught in headlights. Our noses brushed. I licked full, burgundy lips and watched his eyes drop to them. He stared, licking his own lips. Yes, he wanted to kiss me. I could tell. I turned my face, brushing his cheek with my own, and whispered in his ear, “I'm used to fighting the boys off.”

  I pushed my hot, wet tongue into his ear. My libido was on fire. I had to have it.

  “You scare me,” Roger said, jerking away and rubbing at his now wet ear as he slid down lower. I found myself straddling his belly, looking straight down upon him.

  “Does this scare you?” I asked, and slowly lowered my lips to his. Just as our lips met, I parted mine slightly and brushed them across his lips. Then I sank into the kiss. “Mmmmmmmmm.”

  Roger's arms, legs, and wings flopped around a long moment, then settled down. He stopped fighting me, and just enjoyed the kiss. When he didn't kiss back, I became a bit flustered.

  "Are you a vampire or a priest?" I said, frowning at him.

  By that time most men had their hands on my breasts or butt, or both. If not for his pheromones and hard-on, I wouldn't know he was the least bit aroused. I ground my groin into his bulge, and smiled seductively. His eyes grew big. So I leaned down and kissed him again. Deeply. He even returned it.

  "Good boy," I whispered when he tentatively cupped my breasts through the cotton tank. While he fondled me, I started kissing my way up his jaw line, then began kissing my way down his neck. He froze the second I started on his neck. Odd. I located his carotid artery, and kissed the spot deeply. "Momma wanna little taste."

  I opened wide, prepared to sink my fangs in and drink some of his blood. It's what vampires did. Union rule, you know? Or at least that was what I thought. Apparently Roger went by another set of rules.

  "No!" he cried, and shoved me off. Shoved as in threw me across the room. I crashed into and through his tacky dining room set. "Don't bite me! Never bite me."

  "You...," I threw one of her broken chairs at him, which he easily batted aside, "...are one strange cookie."

  "So I've been told," he said, scowling at me.

  "I want to be your friend," I said. I didn't really, but I wanted to know more about his wings. I don't know why, but I was obsessed with them. "You're not making it easy."

  "I don't like vampires," Roger said. "I don't trust you people."

  "Back to that 'you people' crap again," I said. "Remember who and what I am. I am Black Heart — number one vampire slayer and bane of the undead. I don't like vampires much either, but I make exceptions for some."

  Roger frowned.

  "Black Heart," he muttered, shaking his head. "I cheered you on. I never thought you'd show up at my house."

  "I'm not trying to kill you," I said. "I just want to ensure my sister is safe around you. Besides, I don't kill every vampire I meet."

  "You should," he said, grinding his teeth. "They are all evil. I hate them."

  "I hate all evil vampires, too," I said. "And I kill them. But I sense you aren't evil, so why should I kill you? There's no reason for me to kill any vampire that hasn't turned to evil."

  "If you're going to tell you sister what I am, I wish you'd stake me first," he whispered. "I couldn't stand to know they all loath me."

  I thought that a little melodramatic, but he did look like a teenager. Maybe that was how he thought. He was such a strange vampire.

  "Don't you think they deserve to know?"

  "No," he said. "I've been a vampire for eighteen years, and on my own for five of those. It took me four years to find a place I'm accepted."

  "Which is?"

  "The Crimson Knot," he said, and waved it away. "A private club. But all of my friends are members."

  His wings slowly spread wide, giving me my best view so far. They were glorious. I loved them. Most people would think of them as bat wings, but I could turn into a bat. They weren't like real bat wings, but more like the wings you'd see on a movie or cartoon demon. I've never seen a real demon, or even a picture of a real one, so didn't know for sure if they actually had wings or not.

  "How did you get those wings?" I said. "I mean, is it just one of your talents? Like levitation? Or did you do something to get them? Magic?"

  "Sold my soul to a demon," Roger said, scowling at me.

  "Really? So you got them before you were a vampire?"

  "I was joking," he said, suddenly all shy again. He was so damned cute when he got all shy. I was a sucker for shy. Shy or not, I could smell his pheromones filling the air. I know I was still oozing them like crazy, though my libido was cooled considerably by being tossed across the room. "I just wanted them. And..."

  "What? Impossible," I cried. It didn't work that way. Or did it? "You just asked for them? Did you pray to Lucifer or something?

  "Well, it wasn't just like that," he said. To my regret his wings began to slowly retreat into his back. "I thought and concentrated on them a long time, before they actually began to sprout. Once they began, it went pretty fast."

  “Just wishing for them worked?” I said. Could it be that easy? “I just have to sit around and think about wanting them, and in time they will grow?”

  “I don't know,” he said, frus
trating me again. “I spent weeks staring at movie pictures and cartons of the kind of wings I wanted, concentrating with all I had.” He shrugged. “Then I spent months getting them just right.”

  “Just right?”

  “Well, the first ones looked great, but I couldn't fly with them. I experimented until I got them right. It was a slow process,” he said. “The wings I have now work real well.”

  “So I should concentrate on your wings, since you've already worked out the kinks,” I said, gracing him with my best winning smile.

  He looked me in the eyes, very intently, for an uncomfortable amount of time. Then his eyes raked my body a number of times, all the while his pheromones pumped into the air. I think I was winning him over.

  “I-I could help you,” he said. His wings sprouted again, in all of their unholy glory. I gasped, eyes wide as I stared at them. Then in a rush, he said, “With my help you could have working wings in no time. But...you have to promise to never tell anyone I am a vampire, especially not any members of The Crimson Knot. Like your sister.”

  I could have wings. Real wings. Working wings. My God, would I strike terror in the hearts of the undead or what?

  “Okay,” I said. Roger was odd, but he didn't seem a threat. Of course, as a vampire that could change. I'd keep a close eye on him. “Can we start now?”

  Of course my phone rang. The one the vampire council gave me. Yeah, I lost mine at the mall. I planned to use theirs as much as possible before they took it away.

  "Hello?" I said.

  "Sable, what are you doing?" Jeff Howell said. He sounded angry.

  "Why?"

  "There's been another suicide, today while you slept. A vamp working as a bouncer at the Black Rose," he said. Was he implying it was my fault? He hesitated, "And one of my boys is missing. I think he'll be next."

  Someone I knew might die? None of Jeff's family was remotely nice to me. All of Jeff's "boys" were undead thugs. I shouldn't care, but still.

  "Who are you missing?"

  "Jerry."

  Jerry Kincaid. Not the worst of Jeff's thugs. But I could understand Jeff's alarm. Did that mean the killer had set his sights in him? Another council member.

  "Charles Healey," I said. "Were any members of his family killed before him?"

  "Yes. Two," Jeff said. I could tell by his voice he was thinking the same thing. "The council thinks he might have a list of members, and of their family members. You need to move fast."

  I didn't like his tone.

  "Is that a threat?"

  "Yes. Both of your sisters are very pretty," he said. I tightened my grip on the phone, unable to breath. "And has your brother even graduated high school yet?"

  "I'm doing my best, damn you!" I said, trying hard not to scream at him. "I'm not a detective."

  "You're a hunter. Hunt," Jeff said grimly. "Hunt faster."

  "Where was Jerry last seen?"

  "Black Rose," Jeff said. "I sent him to investigate."

  "I'm on it," I said, and ended the call. Glancing at Roger, I smiled weakly, "We'll have to start another time. I have to go."

  "Is Sabrina alright?"

  "For now," I said, then cocked my head as I considered him. From earlier comments, I knew he had been a vampire around eighteen years. "Do you know anything about werewolves?"

  "A little."

  "Do you know any werewolves?"

  "No. Werewolves don't like vampires, either," he said and shrugged. "Unlike mortals, werewolves can spot a vampire on sight. I actively avoid them."

  "Thanks anyway," I said, heading for my car. I punched in Gabe's hospital room as I passed through the garage. It rang five times before he answered. "Gabe? It's Sable."

  "Ugghmm," he said. Gabe sounded half asleep. "You coming over?"

  "No," I said, reaching my car and sliding in. I slammed the door and turned the key. The Mustang roared to life. Big engine. Very fast. "Do you know any werewolves? It's important."

  Hesitation. I felt him go cold through our link. I felt fear within him. Gabe was not happy about being a werewolf. He refused to join a pack. As far as I knew, he knew little more about the local werewolves than I did.

  "Sure," he said. Very subdued. Not like Gabe at all.

  "You do?"

  "I said I did. Why?"

  Fear turned into anger. Was there something between Gabe and the werewolves going on I didn't know about?

  "What about alphas? You know an alpha male with a grudge against vampires?"

  That seemed to be a relief to him. He was starting to pique my curiosity.

  "What alpha doesn't hold a grudge against vampires," he said and barked a laugh. "Hell, I'm an alpha and I hunt vampires."

  True, but he hunted vampires for years before a werewolf bit him.

  "Names," I said. "Give me names, addresses, phone numbers, anything you got."

  "Why?"

  I ground my teeth together, trying heroically not to snarl at him. Why must people try my patience?

  "Have you heard of the Coeur de Sade?"

  "No."

  "Then I'll explain later. Give me names. Now," I said. "I have a situation on my hands, and don't have time to play your stupid little mind game."

  "All right," he said begrudgingly. "But it better be a damned good explanation."

  Gabe gave me five names, but only one address. He didn't have the others' addresses on the top of his head. He would have to look at his address book, at home. At least it was something.

  "Thanks, Gabe. I owe you," I said, and ended the call before he could answer. He was a lecher and a pervert. If given five seconds he would let me know in explicit detail just what he expected in return. I glanced at the dash clock. "One twenty-two. I have a few hours before sunrise."

  I headed for Deep Ellum and the Black Rose.

  At that time of night the roads were pretty clear. I roared down Loop 635, called LBJ. When I reached the High Fives, a fancy name for a really big clover leaf at the intersection of LBJ and Central Expressway, I turned south and headed toward downtown and Deep Ellum.

  Deep Ellum was an old warehouse district that the young and hip turned into their club district way back before my parents were of age to go there. It was only a few blocks, but packed in an awful lot of variety. Sometime in the nineties the vampires moved in. Or maybe they just stopped hiding and had always been there.

  There were only half a dozen openly vampire clubs. Technically the clubs were mostly presented to the world as Goth clubs, or something even more over the edge into kink. Suffice to say the average soccer mom wouldn't have been seen dead in one of them. There were other vampire clubs scattered around the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex, but not in the same concentration as in Deep Ellum.

  Even that late, on a Sunday night Deep Ellum was rocking. The sidewalks were packed with young adults. Freaks, geeks, Goths, and kinksters all intermingled, most in college or not long out. I was almost out of Deep Ellum before I found a parking place.

  Before long I was striding up to the front door of the Black Rose. The Black Rose looked the same as last time I paid a visit, back in late September, that began my path down into undead glory. Had it only been three weeks? Seemed like a lifetime.

  Once again I was striding down the street, stiletto heels clacking and heads turning. I wasn't dressed as provocatively as last time, but tight jeans and thigh boots got most people's attention. Even the two doormen at the entrance took notice. One was a vampire. Both were six feet plus, shaved bald and burly. They wore tight black t-shirts and black trousers, with headsets keeping them in constant communication with their grim brethren inside.

  "Hello, boys," I said. "Got a minute?"

  "No," the vampire said, giving me the once over and not really looking that impressed. The mortal was more impressed, but hiding it outwardly. But I could smell his interest. "Go inside, or leave."

  I ignored his rudeness.

  "I'm here to investigate the apparent suicide of a vampire at the end of last night,"
I said. "Were either of you working when it happened?"

  "Who are you? Why should we answer your questions?" vampire boy said.

  "Me? I'm Sable," I said. "You should answer my questions because I'm trying to help. I'm trying to stop the killings."

  "Talk to management."

  "I will, but first I want to speak with eyewitnesses," I said.

  Vampire boy graced me with the most suspicious look.

  "We've already answered questions," he said.

  "Tall vamp? Light brown hair and weightlifter body?"

  "Yeah. Said his name was Jerry," he said.

  "Jerry Kincaid. One of Jeff Howell's boys," I said, nodding. The bouncers shared a startled look. "That's right, Jeff Howell from the council. His boy's missing now." That got their attention. "I'm looking for him, too. You wouldn't happen to know where he went, would you?"

  "Reunion," the mortal said.

  I slanted a look over my shoulder and slightly up. I could see the big round ball of Reunion Tower. It was framed between two buildings. Reunion was on the other side of downtown. The lights around the ball were going through their sequences, putting on their nightly show.

  "Yeah, he spoke with a man down by the corner – a werewolf by his aura – and then came back to his car muttering about going to Reunion," the vampire said.

  "Yeah, weird," the mortal said.

  "Werewolf? Really?" I said. I stepped close, eagerly. "Describe him."

  They hesitated, thinking. The vampire doorman said, "Six feet plus. Black leather jacket. Jeans."

  "Medium length brown hair," the mortal added. "Short beard, I think."

  "Yeah, he had a beard," the vamp said.

  “What are you doing?” a familiar voice demanded from the door.

  An acquaintance stood a few steps inside, with a pair of undead bouncers to either side of her.

  “Hello, Valerie,” I said. She was decked out in full vampire slut regalia: black leather corset, matching ankle-length leather skirt with a dramatic slit up the front to expose black patent leather thigh boots. Black silk opera gloves and lots of diamond jewelry finished off her look. Just the sort of thing your stereotypical vampire babe would wear for a night on the town. “You know that you're mortal, right? Not dead. Not a vampire.”