Okay, I"ll admit it. I screamed. Screeched, really-all high-pitched and useless. I even started fumbling with the locks, slipping and scrabbling like a cla.s.sic horror-film babe, until I remembered my purse. I made a s.n.a.t.c.h for it, and in a second, my fingers found the Mace where it always hung on the chain next to my keys.
Pulling out the tiny canister, I pointed the nozzle at those razor-sharp teeth. I let rip a big, nasty blast of the stuff.
Fonn reared back with a painful shriek. She pawed at her face.
I didn"t wait to see how quickly she might recover. Besides, discharging the pepper spray in an enclosed s.p.a.ce had unintended consequences, like my own eyes starting to water. This time deftly flipping the lock, I scrambled out of the truck. Once outside, I slammed the door. I hadn"t really meant to shut it quite so hard, but the wind propelled it out of my hand.
Snow raged around me in blinding swirls. Momentarily, I lost sight of the truck even though I was standing right beside it. For a second, I thought maybe I"d blinded myself with the Mace. Then the truck reappeared in a gust of wind. I slapped my hands on to the metal frame so as not to lose it again.
"Sebastian," I shouted into the squall. "Where are you?"
I strained to hear anything beyond the rush of air, and I inched forward toward the hood of the vehicle. Oh, it would so not be good to lose my boyfriend on his birthday. I started to feel a real quiver of panic as the storm continued to bl.u.s.ter. I couldn"t see anything. Snow slid into the tops of my boots as I sank knee-deep with each step. I felt like I was climbing forward into empty s.p.a.ce.
"Sebastian!"
At this point, I might even have been grateful to see Fonn. Any sign that I wasn"t completely swept away into nothingness would have been welcome.
As if on cue, claws snipped at my back. Talons pierced my coat and scratched skin.
I tried to run. I tripped over something and lost my grip on the truck. My entire world became snow. There was snow in my mouth, my eyes, my nose, covering my face, and surrounding my body. I felt suffocated by cold. I started really screaming- deep, terrified-for-your-life bawling.
Hands griped my shoulders with a familiar strength and pulled me under the truck. The s.p.a.ce between the undercarriage and the road was like a little cave. Heat from the engine had carved a no-snow zone, and I lay on my belly on warm, wet road. Sebastian stretched out beside me with a long hose in his hand. The hose was attached to something above us, and his fingers rested on a tiny spigot.
"Radiator drain," Sebastian explained. "Is she coming?"
I started to explain that Fonn had been at my back a second ago when we noticed the digging. Claws scooped out huge chunks of snow, like a demonic prairie dog. Plus, I could feel her magic leeching the heat from me. Cold seeped in from the ground. My body felt heavy with ice, as if I were freezing solid.
Teeth were the first things I saw. I swore they"d grown. They now extended into grotesque spikes, like something you might see on a deep-sea creature or in your nightmares. Her face, too, was distended, almost fishlike, so she seemed to be one human-sized, extended gullet.
Sebastian"s hand began to quake. Ice rimmed his eye lashes and coated his hair. I hadn"t noticed that his fingers crimped together the hose; as the magic started to immobilize him, his fingers slipped off. A blast of heated liquid shot forward. Steam billowed everywhere. The smell of antifreeze filled the air, and I coughed, gagging.
Neon green splashed down Fonn"s gaping throat. When she startled and closed her mouth with a snap, the hot stuff squirted her right between her eyes.
Fonn yelped like a wounded dog, but there was so much steam in the cramped s.p.a.ce I had a hard time seeing what was happening. But I certainly heard the gnashing of teeth, the snarling (which might have been Sebastian, come to think of it), and then a howl like a wounded hound of h.e.l.l that nearly split my eardrums. The wind lifted the tires of the truck off the ground unevenly, so it seemed to bounce.
Then everything was quiet. Dead quiet.
Sebastian crimped the hose again. When the steam cleared, all I could see was a huge melted hole of toxic-green slush. From the front b.u.mper, icicles dripped to sharp points like teeth.
There was no sign of Fonn. I held my breath hopefully and strained to hear anything. Sebastian scanned all around us, his fangs still bared.
I almost didn"t dare hope, but I felt the difference immediately. I still felt cold, but my limbs lightened. I no longer thought I might become a block of ice.
Sebastian put his hand on the spigot. "Do you think we got her?" he asked.
I wedged my hand between the ground and my belly. Closing my eyes, I let my consciousness rise out of my body. With Lilith"s eyes, I scanned the storm. When I didn"t sense Fonn in the immediate area, I reached my mind out further. Far off, on Highway 169, I caught the image of a woman riding bareback on a giant wolf. The vision blurred at the edges, melting into the snow, and steam streamed out of her like blood. She was running wounded. "We got her," I said confidently.
Then I sneezed. The antifreeze smog and the cold plugged up my nose. Dirt was slowly freezing itself into the fabric of my ripped coat and dress. Sebastian screwed tight the spigot and looked over at me. Perhaps in reaction to my miserable expression, he laughed.
"I"m clearly not cursed." He smiled.
"Oh, yeah, why not?" Although, when I said it, the words sounded a bit more like "Hi, what?"
"For one, we"re not dead," he said, pulling the hose from the radiator drain. "Second, you"ve got a smudge of dirt on your nose that"s absolutely adorable." He leaned over and kissed said nose, and I had to scrunch my face to hold back another wet sneeze.
I shook my head. "No, you are cursed. This was insane."
"Come on," he said with a laugh. "Once I get the hose back in place, we can get this baby running again."
I guess defeating an ice demon can brighten a vampire"s day, or night, as the case may be. Feeling gross, exhausted, and tired of the cold, I wasn"t nearly as chipper as I had been at the start of our trip.
As he popped the hood, I started to wonder. I supposed the truck now could be considered a stolen vehicle. What is it when you borrow an abandoned one? Still a crime, no doubt. And, honestly, I had to wonder about whether or not Fonn owned this truck to begin with. What if, somewhere out in the snow drifts, there was a heat-sucked corpse waiting to be found and somehow linked back to us? "Are you sure that"s a good idea?"
"Be practical," Sebastian said as he slid me out of our warmish, wet cave under the truck. "You"ll freeze to death without the heat."
He had a point. I was already chilled to the bone. "What about all the antifreeze?"
"The truck can run on water for a little while."
I tried to remember if I"d seen a bottle of water anywhere in the cab. "Where are we going to get that?"
Sebastian looked around at the piles of snow and gestured with his open hands. "We seem to have an abundance of the frozen kind right here."
I nodded. He got to work with a grin and a whistle. He seemed genuinely pleased to be fixing up the truck. I left him to it. The storm had abated to the point where I could see where I was going, so I stumbled my way back and threw myself into the pa.s.senger side of the truck. The interior stank of pepper spray, and, while I waited for Sebastian to finish, I coughed and sneezed until I had to open a window. Sebastian worked by the light of the headlights, while I sat there glumly.
In the fifteen minutes it took him to reconnect the hose and refill the radiator with snow water, the storm quit enough that I could see the occasional star through breaks in the clouds.
The truck ran hot all the way into town, but, luckily, Sebastian told me that the best way to contain that problem was to keep the heaters on full-blast.
My toes were toasty again by the time we pulled up to the darkened restaurant. "Oh, no," I said, noticing the absence of any lights.
Sebastian just shook his head, a trace of his earlier sullenness returning. Even so, he pulled the truck into a parking spot and killed the engine. "We might as well go check it out."
Despite myself, I felt a deep stab of desolation. The one thing I"d been fighting for-a decent night out for Sebastian"s birthday- now seemed ruined. I could feel a tear hovering at the corner of my eye. I wiped at it with a knuckle. "Yeah," I said, trying to sound hopeful, but failing even to my ears. "Let"s go check it out."
I trudged through the courtyard, one of my favorite features of Portobello during the summer. Snow draped the barren Virginia creeper vines that twined around the walls like white-frosted lace. Where they poked through the drifts, black-eyed Susan seed heads wore dots of snow. Dried husks of milkweed and mullein stood sentry over sleeping garden beds. The cobblestone walkway had been recently shoveled, and Sebastian and I made our way quickly to the heavy wooden door. A pull on the bra.s.s handle confirmed my worst fears. It was locked. Closed.
"I"m sorry," I blubbered. Despite my best efforts, a hot tear ran down my chill-burned cheek.
Sebastian wrapped his arms around me, and I smelled that comforting scent of cinnamon again. I breathed in deeply. "It"s okay," he lied smoothly. "I"m just glad we"re both alive."
Yeah, and it"s my fault we were out in the first place, I wanted to say, but I was too choked up to make my throat work. I was just about to suggest we turn around and head for my apartment, when the door swung open, nearly knocking us off our feet. A round-faced older man wrapped in a shapeless parka and a stocking hat raised his eyebrows at us hugging on the restaurant doorstep.
"Von Traum party?" he asked.
"Yes," I said, wiping at my tears. "How did you know?"
"You were our only reservation tonight," he said. "When the blizzard hit, everyone cleared out. The storm only now just let up
enough for me to get out and shovel. I was just about to head home."
I wanted to beg him to stay, but I couldn"t blame the guy for wanting to get home after a storm like this one. "Please don"t let us stop you. I"m so sorry you waited for us. We forgot our cell phone."
"No, no problem. If you"re happy to pay, I"m happy to stay!"
"Seriously?" I brightened.
He waved a mitten dismissively. "I"ve seen worse storms. Besides, it"s your birthday," he said to Sebastian. "You should do
something nice. I know how it is; my birthday is on Thanksgiving. Do you even know how sick of turkey I am?"
We all laughed.
Then, to Sebastian I asked, "Are you up for it? Really? I"d understand if you just wanted to go home, too."
Sebastian smiled. "Let"s stay. I"m starving."
Though my dress had claw marks down the back, we had wine and pasta by candlelight and the place to ourselves. The cook
pampered us with special sauces, fresh breadsticks and garlic b.u.t.ter, and tiramisu for two. Sebastian"s kisses tasted of fresh
whipped cream and chocolate.
We walked to my apartment in the quiet, peaceful snow, hand in hand. At home, I gave him his birthday present-ironically, a part for his antique car that he"d been searching for-and a lot more.
"Still think you"re cursed?" I asked him, after.
Sebastian thought for a moment. "Let"s see, today we had our car break down, met some kind of storm demon who tried to kill
us, and had fantastic pasta. Yes, I"m cursed," he said. When I was about to protest, he put a finger on my lips. "But I also have you. That makes the whole thing bearable."
And then he called me incorrigible again, and we laughed and kissed until dawn.
Vampire Hours Elaine Viets Elaine Viets is the author of two mystery series. Murder with Reservations is her sixth Dead-End Job novel. Her third Josie Marcus Mystery Shopper book, Accessory to Murder, will be out this fall. Elaine has won both the Anthony and Agatha Awards for her short stories. "Vampire Hours" is her first vampire story. She lives in Fort Lauderdale, across the water from a condo whose occupants were the inspiration for this story.
"It"s three o"clock in the morning, Katherine. Go to sleep."
My husband, the surgeon. Eric barked orders even in the middle of the night.
"I can"t sleep," I said.
"I have to be at the hospital in three hours. Turn off the light. And go see a doctor, will you? You"re a pain in the a.s.s."
Eric rolled away from me and pulled the pillow over his face.
I turned off the light. I felt like a disobedient child in my own home, as I listened to my husband of twenty-five years snore into his
pillow. Eric could fall asleep anywhere, any time. Especially when he was in bed with me.
If I pushed his face into the pillow, could I smother him?
Probably not. Years of late-night emergency calls had given Eric an instant, unnatural alertness.
I lay alone on my side of the vast bed, stiff as a corpse in a coffin. My white negligee seemed more like a shroud than s.e.xy
sleepwear. My marriage to Eric was dead, and I knew it. I wanted him to love me, and hated myself for wanting a man so cold.
He wasn"t like that when we were first married. Then, he"d ripped off so many of my nightgowns, he"d bought me a thousand-
dollar gift certificate at Victoria"s Secret. I"d model the latest addition and he"d rip it off again. Back then, he didn"t care if he had early surgery. We"d had wild, all-night s.e.x.
A tear slipped down my cheek, and I cursed it. Tears came too easily these days, ever since menopause. "The change," my
mother had called it. Once, before I knew what those changes were, I"d looked forward to menopause. I wanted the monthly
flow of blood to stop. I was tired of the bloat, the cramps, and the pain.
But the change was infinitely worse. Oh, the blood stopped, as promised. But n.o.body told me what would start: the weight gain, no matter how hard I dieted. How could I get fat on rice cakes and lettuce?