It was about midday on Wednesday. It had been three days since I was with the Chasses. I wanted to go back over there so bad, but I had to keep my fake routine. I was supposed to be at work. They thought I was working a construction job, so I couldnât just come over in the middle of the day when the rest of the world was working. So, I sat in the factory alone and miserable.
My mind stayed far off, reliving my memories from my time with them. I had even gone over to their house every night just to check on them. I had to make sure that they were okay, especially after my run-in with the vampires. I couldnât stop picturing the blonde vampire that eluded me, finding them by following my scent. Every night since, I stayed in the woods that lined their neighborhood, watching them from a distance, guarding them in secret from any unannounced visitors. It was my fault after all.
I couldnât stop worrying about them. I knew that they could probably defend themselves if attacked in their own home. There was silver everywhere. Nothing could get them, let alone even get close, but I still worried.
When I thought about it, I had only been with them twice, but they still treated me like family, at least what it felt like around family. It was all because I knew their big family secret and accepted it, asking to know more. Not to mention they saw me handle their silver with no ill effect. That was all the evidence they needed to try and pull me in deeper. Shit, Frank wanted to induct me in as a full-fledged hunter already, even come to work for them. I laughed at the thought.
I waited, patiently, in my dank lair, wishing I was in their home. The smell of the ancient factory was musty and decayed. I remembered Autumnâs hair, the way it smelled after she had showered on Sunday. God⦠I just wanted to be back in their home, I just wanted to feel accepted again, like I had friends. I wanted Autumn to look at me again, the way she looked at me all those times in her house and in the car.
It was around four-thirty, I had waited long enough. I pulled out my newly acquired cell phone and selected Carterâs number, which I had programmed in already. It was the only number I had saved. It rang only three times before he answered.
âHello?â Carterâs familiar voice chirped in my ear.
âCarter, itâs Sam,â I said.
He was silent for a moment as he realized who he was talking to, âSam, whatâs going on? I havenât heard from you in a few days,â he said, wary that I wanted nothing to do with them.
âYeah, sorry⦠work, you know how it is. My day job doesnât allow me much time to go hunt the creatures of the night. Not if I want a check, anyway,â I laughed.
He snickered, âYeah, I didnât think they would.â
âWhatâs been happening? Anything new come up since Sunday⦠you know, about what Jane told us?â I asked feverishly.
He answered quickly, âActually, Iâm going to check something out in a little bit. You want to come?â
âYeah, definitely,â I agreed quickly. I wanted more chances to pick his brain.
âGood,â he said. âCan you meet me at my house? Or I can pick you up if you need a ride.â
My solitary nature wanted to take the tunnels out to his part of town, but I couldnât keep showing up out of nowhere, no car or ride anywhere in sight. I hadnât solved that problem yet like I had with the cell phone. Theyâd start wondering how I got to their house, and it might tip them off enough to start digging. I couldnât have them learn anything about me. Not the real me, anyway.
âCould you pick me up from where you dropped me off Sunday night? As long as itâs not a problemâ¦â
âNot at all, Iâll head there now. I should be there in twenty,â Carter said.
âSounds good, Iâll be there,â I said, then shutting the small flip phone.
I paced anxiously through the dim corridors of the old factory. I couldnât stand still. I felt like a kid going back to school for the first day after summer vacation. I wondered if any of the Chasseâs had changed since the last time I saw them, if they thought about me since I left, or if theyâd treat me like they did before.
They treated me like family, as one of them. It was foreign to me after the last two years. I had to be better this time, to act like an average person. I had barely said two words the first night with them, and the second day I hadnât said much either, except to Autumn. I was very observational now, always taking everything in, looking for hidden truths. Thatâs how I found my prey, but I couldnât be like that with them.
The thought of Autumn made me get even more nervous. I wanted to see her again. I hoped sheâd be there.
I went for my jacket, throwing it over my hoodie and making my escape from the factory and all it represented. The cold, dark walls that trapped me were no more, and all that waited for me now was warmth, friends, and possibly⦠family. I hoped.
I had all of my essentials; my cell phone, my silver blade, my jacket, and the monster. It skimmed just beneath the surface of my consciousness, waiting, ready to be summoned. It wasnât clawing to get out. It had been like a bear in hibernation after so many kills the past week.
I continued pacing, thinking about what I was doing, what I was risking. I started to fight myself, teetering on the edge of my decisions, but then I stopped. I liked what I was feeling, and I didnât want to fight it anymore. I was turning into a selfish beast.
I made my way downtown swiftly, and after about fifteen minutes Carter pulled to a stop against the curb of a semi-busy street. The window to the black Suburban rolled down smoothly. Carter looked across the small distance to me, waving me over to the car. I sprang forth from a light post where I waited, jogging over to the passenger side. I opened the door and slid into the seat, taking a deep breath to prepare myself for any knee jerk reactions by the monster. Being around humans was never one hundred percent easy, no matter how recently I killed, so I was still cautious.
âYou had us nervous,â Carter said, pulling away from the curb.
I wrapped my seatbelt around me and craned my head to the back. It was then that I noticed that there were others in the car. Their scents hit me at the same time I saw them.
âWhat do you mean?â I asked.
Autumn and Clara were sitting right behind us in the middle row. Autumn was silent, but she was looking up at me, smiling. Her dark chestnut hair was pulled back tightly in a couple of fancy braids. It seemed more tactical, especially since Claraâs was similarly done.
âWe didnât think youâd come back after you left Sunday,â Clara jested. âWe thought the werewolves were the straw that broke the camelâs back.â
I smirked at the thought, like I could be scared away. Not likely.
âNo, Iâm good. Just had to make a few appearances at work,â I laughed.
âWell, whatever the case,â Carter said, âweâre glad you came back. Itâs hard to find people like you, who arenât too scared to fight. But you always have the choice if you decide that this isnât the life you want.â
I nodded, âIâll remember that.â
We were all silent for a few moments. It wasnât awkward, it was just peaceful. I had a stray thought.
âWhat about the rest of you guys? The actual family, do you have the option to leave all this? If thatâs what you want?â
Carterâs look was a strong one, a proud one.
âIf someone in our family wanted out, to live a normal life, we wouldnât stop them. We all have the option to leave, we just donât,â he said.
âWhy?â I asked, confused.
Why would they risk themselves, their family, and their friends to fight monsters? I wouldnât risk what I left behind in Dallas.
âSince we know the way the world actually works, we do what we have to do to stop bad things from happening,â Carter said. âSince I know, I must use what I know to stop them. I canât let anything happen to my family, and that is why I do it. I know whatâs out there, so I fight them because I know the truth. I fight for my family.â
âWe all do,â Clara added. Autumn nodded along to her statement.
âSince we know, we have a responsibility to do something. Ignoring the fact of what actually exists, wouldnât change the truth. Things are out there, looking to kill. So, we train, we hunt, we kill to protect ourselves, our families, and others we can help.â Carter smirked, âBesides, once you know what exists, itâs kind of hard to live a normal life. Something is always out there, lurking around a dark corner.â
âNo matter how much we want a normal life for ourselves, the fact remains, this is the real world. When you accept that, then you can embrace the life we lead,â Clara said.
I felt I understood them better now. Just doing nothing wasnât an option for them. If I knew about this back before I was turned, would I have done the same thing?
âSo how do you keep everyone safe? I mean⦠wouldnât something be able to track you to your house?â I could track by scent, it was easy. What stopped a curious monster from following them home?
âWe donât leave any survivors,â Autumn spoke quietly, looking out her window.
Carter piggybacked off her statement, âThe silver bombs we use, weaken their senses. That is our main method of attack. Once we disorient them with silver, we take them out quick, no hesitations.â
âLike the other night?â I asked.
âYes, but usually, we are much more coordinated. We werenât sure about those three being there, and we really didnât plan on you being there either. We just wanted to see if any clues presented themselves. We only acted when we saw you. They would have killed you if we hadnât,â Carter said.
If I had stood there and let them try, it would have been unlikely. They wouldnât have been able to really hurt me. Even I hadnât done that yet.
âIf something does evade us and tries to follow us home, we have a series of barriers that we use to lose anything that is following our trail.â Clara chimed in.
âWhat do you mean?â I asked. This was getting interesting.
âWe have distortion zones. Theyâre areas that the creatures canât go near. They make them⦠hazy. It dulls their senses and puts a kind of fog on them. We use them to our advantage, navigating through them to make it home safe. But, usually, we can kill them all in a single fight when weâre out on a hunt, so those are the last resort.â
âWhat are they? How do they work?â I wondered if theyâd work on me.
âSilver mostly, but a few are specialized. Certain creatures are weak against other things, as well as silver. Silver is the one thing that affects them all, and the most powerful. We use these materials to line buildings and structures around the city to create these zones.â
Clara chuckled, âOur day job. It pays quite nice too.â
Carter could sense my thoughts, âThatâs the family business. We own and operate a construction company of our own, but we focus mainly on restorations of older buildings. Thatâs how we can get away with lining places in trace silver and embedded wardings.â
Then, I realized what Frank meant.
âOh⦠I see it now.â
Clara laughed when I understood, âYeah, we were all looking at you as the perfect addition to our family. You already went toe to toe with a blood sucker, and you just happened to work in construction.â She patted my shoulder from behind, âItâs like you were sent to us.â
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âSo thatâs what Frank meant the other day.â
âYeah,â Carter nodded. âItâs an option for you⦠if you want.â
I glanced up at the rear-view mirror. Autumn eyed me intently, trying to read my thoughts. Her gaze lingered on me, waiting to see what I would say. If I said anything.
I nodded, taking it all in. âSo, how would that play out, if I came to work for you?â
I couldnât believe what I was saying. The part of me that usually reigned in stray thoughts was nowhere to be found. I was falling in deep with the Chasses. I wanted to be with them, talk with them, learn from them, and fight with them. The short time that I knew them was intense for me. For them, I wasnât sure what it was like, but I had been alone for two years, so this was all hitting me a lot harder than it should. I was starting to care for them.
âWell, if you came to work for us, we could have you doing a variety of different things. The company, CWT Construction, does many different things, but everything we do is a way to keep fighting monsters. All our earnings go towards keeping our operation funded. But there are always other things that come up that we could have you do.â
âOkayâ¦â I agreed, mainly with myself. I already made up my mind, fuck the consequences. I just couldnât look back.
Autumnâs eyes were wide in the rear-view mirror, waiting for me to continue.
âAs long as youâll have me, Iâll join up.â
Clara pulled out her phone and started texting, âFrank is gonna be so excited. He hasnât shut up about you since Sunday.â
Autumn was looking down in her seat, her posture hiding her face from the mirror. I wondered about her thoughts. Did she want me around more? Maybe I was an intruder in her life, and she was just polite. Maybe she could sense something wrong with me.
âWe can work out the details later,â Carter said as we came to a stop.
We pulled into the parking lot of a small, standalone building. It had neon signs hanging in almost every window, but they were off. No light escaped through the cracks in the blinds that hung in every glass panel. It was dark and apparently closed.
Carter turned in his seat, âYou two stay here and cover the door, monitor the radios, and listen for back-up.â
Autumn and Clara nodded. Clara half crawled over her seat and pulled a duffle from the very back.
âYouâre coming with me,â Carter said. âThere is someone I want you to meet.â
I glanced back toward the entrance of the modest building, its weathered facade illuminated by the flickering neon sign above the windows. The sign read, in bold, faded letters, "Martinâs Bar and Grill." A sudden clarity struck me, pieces of the puzzle snapping into place in my mind. This was the infamous vampire Martin's lair, the same place where Carter and Frank ventured to on Sunday.
Carter stepped out of the car first, his movements deliberate and confident. I followed closely, matching his pace as we approached the entrance. In the backseat, Clara and Autumn were busy, their expressions focused as they loaded two small handguns from a duffle bag, the metallic clicks of ammunition sliding into chambers breaking the silence in my ears.
We walked briskly to the front door, the air thick with anticipation. Carter didnât hesitate for a moment as he pushed through the door, his determination evident in every step. We found ourselves in a small, dimly lit entryway, the walls adorned with corkboards laden with flyers for various local eventsâbake sales, missing pets, community meetings. The air smelled faintly of old paper and dust.
At the far end of the entryway, a set of locked double doors barred our path. Carter reached into his pocket, retrieving a small, tarnished key. With practiced ease, he inserted it into the lock and turned it, the sound of the tumblers clicking echoing in the confined space. He pulled the door open, revealing whatever lay beyond.
âIâll introduce you, but Iâll do the talking. Just stick beside me the whole time, and weâll be fine,â Carter said.
I nodded.
âTeam one, team two⦠radio check,â he spoke into his shoulder.
âL-C, how us?â a voice replied.
âL-C,â Carter answered.
We stepped into the room, swallowed by shadows that seemed to pulse with a life of their own. The dim light barely penetrated the gloom, casting eerie, elongated silhouettes that danced along the walls. I followed Carter closely, my senses on high alert, attuned to every whisper of movement, every creak and groan of the ancient building.
The air was thick with the stale scent of old fry oil and cigarette smoke, a nauseating blend that dredged up memories of a dingy bowling alley from my childhood. We navigated through the labyrinth of stacked chairs and tables, their worn surfaces ghostly in the faint light. Pushing through a pair of grimy swinging doors, we entered the kitchen. The dim, flickering fluorescent lights did little to chase away the oppressive darkness.
At the far end of the kitchen, a narrow hallway stretched out, a thick metal door looming ominously at its end. Carter raised a hand, halting me at the threshold. He moved forward alone, his steps echoing ominously. Reaching the door, he rapped his fist against the metal, three deliberate, commanding knocks that reverberated through the corridor.
Silence followed, thick and heavy, before the sound of internal locks disengaging filled the air with a mechanical clatter. The door groaned in protest as it swung open, rusty hinges screaming. From the depths of the shadows behind the door, a figure emergedâa man of medium build with light brown hair. His youthful appearance was betrayed by his pale blue eyes, which held a weariness that spoke of centuries. He gazed at us, unperturbed, as if expecting our arrival.
"Carter," he greeted in a surprisingly amiable tone, a stark contrast to the grim surroundings.
âMartin, how are things?â he replied.
So, this was Martin. This was who he and Frank went to see after our morning with the werewolves.
âEverything is fine with me. However, I can see that you have been recruiting,â Martin eyed me. âItâs been a while since youâve found a new one.â
I could smell his blood. It was a similar stench to the other vampireâs, a mixed bag of crimson lifeforce, except his was slightly different. Something⦠not human, lingered in his blood. I hadnât smelled this on any of the other vampires. Theirs was like concentrated crowds of humans bottled up into one person. Yet, he was different somehow.
âIt sure has. Martin, this is Sam. Samâ¦Martin,â Carter introduced. âWe met him on the night we went to the warehouse. He killed one of them,â Carter said. âThanks for the tip, by the way.â
Martin flashed a swift look of disbelief, but it faded faster than it appeared.
âInteresting,â he said, eyeing me up and down. âItâs nice to meet you,â he reached out to shake.
Carter looked at me and nodded, giving me the, its safe, nod. I played along, trying to act how I thought a normal person would. I slowly reached for his hand and shook, not using too much strength to give myself away as anything other than human.
Martin smiled, trying to ease me into the situation. âThatâs impressive, killing one of my kind. You sure youâve never fought one of us before?â he laughed, yet a serious tone lay beneath his words.
Actually, I hadnât, but since my first run in, I had killed three others.
âNope,â I laughed, playing the part.
Was it really that hard to kill a vampire if you were an untrained human? It seemed a far stretch for me, but then I had to remember how weak I used to be as a human.
âWe actually came to talk to you on Sunday, but you werenât here.â
âIâm sorry, I was out⦠preoccupied with a few things.â I wondered what.
They actually seemed friendly, strained, but friendly.
âI need you to look at something, see what you can make of it,â Carter said.
Martin raised his eyebrows, âHow can I help?â
âDetective Ames gave me some pictures of a crime scene. It was very unusual. It looked like an animal attack, but there was also arson.â Carter handed him the pictures. No fear of getting too close to him. Martin showed no signs of attack. âI talked with Jane about this before coming to see you on Sunday. She said that she had seen bodies like these before, out in the woods. She says itâs none of her pack, that itâs something else.â
Martin slowly examined each picture and then shuffled to the next. He eyed them curiously as Carter recounted the last few days of investigation, which led to nothing.
âJane says that she found bodies like these in her woods?â Martin asked.
âJust a few times over the past two years, but she said that they had to be from the same thing that killed these men,â Carter pointed to the pictures. âThe carnage was identical to her.â
Martin was silent, weighing things in his mind. He knew something. I could read it like it was written on his forehead.
âYou knowâ¦â Martin stopped to think. âIâve heard stories over the past few years, rumors really, of someone ripping through people like a wild animal. It is unusual. Iâve heard vampires that come in here talking about it from time to time. People would just go missing, or theyâd turn up somewhere far away, ripped in half, or shredded beyond recognition.â
âLike these men here?â Carter asked, pointing to the pictures again.
âExactly like this. At least thatâs the story anyway. Iâve never heard of any concrete evidence like this, however,â Martin motioned to the photographs. âBut, there has never been anything like this arson. Why would a creature kill all these people and then burn it down? It brings too much attention to our kind. There are consequences for things like this.â
âThe police donât know what to make of it. To be completely honest, neither do I. After all the time I spent asking around this week, I feel like we are just chasing a ghost. No one knows anything; the Wicklows, the other gypsies, the werewolves, none of my other contacts from your world⦠nobody,â Carter was at a loss. âI havenât spoken to Annabelle yet, but you know her. Sheâll reach out before I even have the question.â
Shit, I was at a loss. I didnât know what Carter had been doing all week, searching for clues, searching for me. I wondered who all of his other contacts were.
âAnd Jane says that it was no one in her pack? She knows this for certain?â Martin asked double-checking.
âSheâs sure. Look here,â Carter directed Martinâs attention to a particular picture. âNone of these bodies were fed on, just killed. If it was a werewolf, they would have fed on at least a few of them.â
âSheâs rightâ¦â Martin said and then went silent. He examined every picture again with this new revelation. Something flashed across Martinâs face.
âWhat is it?â Carter asked.
Thoughts and memories were turning in his eyes. Finally, he looked back at us.
âI used to never give these stories too much thought, butâ¦â he trailed off. âSomething happened here the other night, with another vampire.â He shook his head, leaning against the wall. âWhy didnât I see it sooner,â he berated himself.
âWhat do you mean?â asked Carter.
âI donât think that these incidents are unrelated.â
âWhat happened?â
âA vampire ran in here the other night, clothes torn and spattered with blood.â He replayed the memories through his words. âHe was running from something. Something that he said killed two other vampires that were with him.â
I could hear Autumn or Clara saying something on the radios, probably just talking to each other about what was being told.
âIâve rarely seen a vampire running scared, not since the late eighteen hundreds; back when we hunted our own kind. This boy was scared, he said that something fought all three of them in an alley, right as they were about to feed on a girl.â
Shit⦠it was me⦠again. The vampire that escaped me the other night had fled to Martinâs. It was probably looking for safety in numbers. I should have never let him escape.
The monster moved inside as I remembered the helpless human girl, running to stay alive. Flashes of tearing through those assholes clouded my mind. It felt good.
âHe said that it ripped through the other two like they were nothing. One of them was trying to fight it off, but it just powered through him. He said he could hear the bones snapping under the creatureâs attacks. Then it lunged into the other one and tore his head from his shoulders. He said they never had a chance.â
âWhat can do that to three vampires? Are they sure it was only one⦠person?â Carter searched for a word for the unknown killer.
âYes, just the one. He said it was unstoppable; he actually used the word. This is the strange part, he says that it fell from the top of a building, landed right in between them and the girl they were going to kill, and then it attacked. It threw him like a ragdoll into a brick wall, and then started on the others. Thatâs how he escaped. It was busy with the other two.â
âDid he get a look at it, its face?â
âNot a good one. He said the man wore a hood over his head, and it was dark so he couldnât make out much. But⦠he did say that he saw the eyes during the attack. He said they were completely black.â
Carter was silent for a moment, taking in this new detail. âIâve never heard of that before,â Carter said, trying to recount everything he had ever read from his bestiaries.
âNeither have Iâ¦,â Martin spoke ominously, âand Iâve been around for a while.â Martin shrugged, âThereâs something else too. He said that its claws were different. They were longer than anything he had seen, more like talons. They were just as black as the eyes.â
Carter put the pieces together, âItâs the same thing, it has to be. Jane said she could tell that whatever killed those men that she found in her woods had longer claws than any werewolf. It has to be the same thing⦠but what is itâ¦â Carter trailed off, confused and deep in thought.
âI cannot say. This is new to me. I know that is not usually the case, but I donât know,â Martin said. âThere are a few things I can look into, but it will take some time and serious effort.â He looked a little unwilling about the last part.
Carter nodded, âOkay. Weâll do our own investigation; run through our usual channels to see what we can find. This thing had to come from somewhere. Someone has to know something.â
âBe careful,â Martin warned. âThis isnât our only threat. The vampires know about the kills at the warehouse.â
Carter looked up sharply.
âThey donât know who killed them, obviously, or how the location was discovered, but they know that they are dead, all four of them.â
Carter nodded, relieved, but then looked at Martin in confusion, âYou mean threeâ¦â
âI told you three, I know, but I found out later that there were four. I was relieved when I heard that all four of them had been killed.â
âWhat are you talking about,â Carter and Martin stared back and forth to each other, confused. âThere were only three; I killed one, Frank killed one, and Sam killed the last.â He looked to me as he recounted my assist.
I did kill the last, but I also got the one who hid. Yet another clue I left behind.
âI donât know how, but there was another, and he is now dead, on the very same night as the others.â
âHow do you know?â I asked, intrigued.
âVampires⦠we can sense others in our bloodline, especially generationally close ones; made by the same vampire, if you will,â he put in laymenâs terms. âAnother vampire in their bloodline came here, asking questions. He said that all four of them had been cut from his senses. Thatâs what happens when they are killed; they canât be felt by others in their family.â
âWell, we only killed three. If there was a fourth, then he died by someone elseâs hand.â
âInteresting⦠Iâll look into this as well,â Martin said. âPerhaps by this new creatureâ¦â
âWeâll take our usual precautions. Iâll wait to hear from you.â
âAlways a pleasure, Carter,â Martin said, then looked to me again. âIt was nice to meet you, Sam. I hope to see you again.â
He shouldnât hope for that. He had just entered into my realm of possibilities. If I needed a kill and had chosen no one else, he would do. I felt no pangs of guilt for killing a vampire, none at all.
âSame,â I nodded and backed out with Carter.
We exited the building and walked back across the parking lot. Carter and I hopped into the Suburban, and Carter took off.
Clara spoke as soon as we got in, âWhat do you think?â
âI donât know,â Carter spoke but stared off through the windshield. âSomething is out there, but we donât what it is or why itâs killing.â
âItâs killing humans and creatures. What would do that?â Autumn spoke from the back seat.
âWe need to get everyone together. If it is real, then that means that all of the stories weâve heard recently are true, and it has been killing humans. That puts it in our wheelhouse. We need to know what we are dealing with,â Carter started making plans in his head.
Fuck⦠this was bad. I just found this group who accepted me, and I didnât want to leave. I wanted to stay with them. I wanted to have friends. But, I was going to have to make a decision, and very soon. I had to decide if I was staying or going.
âSo, what do we do now?â I asked.
âWeâre going home,â Carter answered.
I looked to the back and saw Autumn looking at me intently. She gave me a soft smile. Autumn looked at me like I was made of glass. She didnât want this new unknown threat to scare me away. If they knew the truth, it would be the other way around.