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Monday, July 2, 2012

Vampires In Paradise: Chapter One

I thought that I would post Chapter One of Vampires In Paradise here on the blog to get the old juices flowing, to make it a tad bit more accessible. Chapter One and Two are both available as a free download when you go to the Kindle page for Vampires In Paradise at Amazon. Here's the link for that.


Jeremy aimed his bike for the small grassy area between the two apartment buildings. He shifted the pedal backward, applied the brake and slowed enough to step off the bike, lay it on the exact spot he wanted and hit the ground running, shifting the half full newspaper bag further back on his hip.
"Perfect!" he whispered, and rounded the corner into the still sleeping apartment building’s courtyard. Six papers to throw here, out the back, through the alley over to the next building, throw eight more, then back to his waiting bike.
Jeremy ran to the center of the small complex, gathering a handful of papers from inside the cloth bag as he ran. He stopped at the same spot he had stopped every morning for the last two years, and standing in the darkness, winged the papers at his customer's porches. Whump . . . whump . . . whump. The papers landed on the damp concrete exactly in front of the doors.
For the hundredth time, he reminded himself to bring plastic bags tomorrow morning, especially if the air was as wet as now. October mornings in San Diego weren't usually so damp, even this close to the beach.
Thinking about it made him think about January, and the miserable rainy mornings that made up that whole month, a depressing thought he quickly dismissed from his mind, concentrating instead on getting the last two papers up over the railing onto the second floor. Old Mrs. Nash and that new guy, the one he had only collected from once so far. What was his name? Aaron Michaels.
Yeah, that was it. He remembered the guy had counted out the last two and a half dollars of the $14.00 bill in quarters; exactly $14.00 and not even one cent for a tip.
He watched his last shot expectantly, the one for Michaels. It sailed up over the railing, clearing it by inches, and arced downward, banging loudly against the cheapskate's door.
Happy wake-up time, motherfucker.
Jeremy smiled, took a moment to breathe in the cool night air, and took off again, headed for the rear entrance to the apartments.
Emerging onto the sidewalk in front of the alley, he stepped off the short curb onto the parking apron, running between the tenants’ parked cars. He purposely banged his paper bag against the side of Michaels’ Camaro convertible, surprised to see that the top was down. He thought about stopping to take a leak on the cheapskate's white leather upholstery, in the same instant deciding against it, and then came to a skidding halt alongside the powder blue sports car.
He almost rubbed his eyes, he was so astonished at what he saw. Laying on the tiny back seat of the Camaro was the most beautiful, long legged woman Jeremy had ever seen, huddled to her long frame on the small perch. She was sound asleep.
Long blonde hair spilled across her face, the strands stirring lightly with each breath. One arm curled up, forearm resting on her forehead, shading her eyes from the glare of the streetlight, the other hung limp at her side, resting on the floorboard. Her chest swelled with each breath, large breasts riding up under the white knit top that ended inches short of the waistband of her short black miniskirt.
But it was the hem of her skirt that attracted Jeremy's eyes now. To fit those long white legs into the cramped back seat, she had drawn them up, one thigh resting against the backrest of the seat, the other dangling as limply as her arm.
He bent down a little to improve his view and caught sight of the whole area between her slim thighs, white panties against creamy white skin. He strained forward, leaning into the Camaro, and glimpsed strands of pubic hair curling out around the elastic leg bands.
Was it blonde, like the hair on her head? He couldn't tell. The hem of her skirt cast just enough of a shadow to keep the true color hidden.
But, he was seeing it! He thought he could make out the outline of the lips of her sex through the tight stretched material. He was overwhelmed with the desire to touch her there, at the same time petrified with the prospect of waking her.
Probably just some drunk beach chick passed out in the first open car she could find, said the voice of desire growing inside of him. I could probably stick my whole hand inside of her and she wouldn't even know it.
He had done it before, a year ago. He had come upon a woman passed out on a bus stop bench long after the last bus had run. He had seen her many times before stumbling up Noewport Avenue, nearly ran into her once when she poured out on the sidewalk coming out of the Pacific Shores Lounge.
She was at least fifty and a little on the heavy side. The way she slumped down on the bench had made her dress ride up to the tops of her laddered stockings.
She hadn't even stirred when he slipped his hand up under her dress and pried her panties aside to play with her. In fact, she hardly even knew what was going on when he roused her enough to stand her up, telling her he was going to help her get home, but instead helping her to stagger behind a nearby clump of bushes.
Once they were both hidden from the street, he rifled her purse, pocketing the few bills and a couple of credit cards, and then pushed her down on the grass.
"Wai' a minute . . . whas goin' on?" was all she managed to say before passing out again, and Jeremy rolled her over on her belly and yanked her dress up around her waist.
He left her there when he was finished, doubled over the pillow he had made of her coat and purse, dress hiked up over her bare rump, panties down around her knees, still snoring.
He grinned now, remembering that night. Probably the nastiest thing I ever did.
But this was no barfly. This was the most gorgeous woman he had ever seen. And this wasn't some park bench, either. This was the back seat of one of his customer's cars. If he touched her and she screamed, he would have the whole complex up and chasing after him.
"But, shit, she's gorgeous!" he told himself, slipping the strap of the newspaper bag off his shoulder and easing it to the ground, knowing he was at least going to try. Then, reaching out, he nudged the woman's knee.
"Ma'am?" His voice just a whisper. There was no response from the sleeping woman.
"Ma'am? You gotta wake up, Ma'am. It's not safe for you to be sleeping out here in the open. This ain't the greatest neighborhood, you know”. He nudged her knee again.
Still, she did not stir.
See? he reassured himself, reaching for the door handle. He was feeling confident now, sure he could get in, cop a quick feel, and get out without waking the sleeping woman. Besides, he was bigger and stronger than she was.
At fourteen, he was already six feet tall and weighed a little more than one hundred fifty pounds. If she woke up, he would just deal with it. As drunk as she must be, she wouldn't put up much of a fight.
"I might even decide to fuck her,”
He pulled on the car door with both hands, opening it noiselessly until it stopped on its hinge, then slowly stepping up into the floorboard of the backseat, careful not to brush her leg, leaning over her.
"Ma'am?" He nudged her shoulder now. "It's time to wake up."
But she didn't wake up, let out a long, slow breath that made Jeremy reel back from the stench.
"Man! You been drinking something nasty,” he said, the terrible odor reassuring him that she was just a drunk, and deserved whatever happened to her for being stupid enough to pass out before she got home.
He decided that she was too clean and well dressed to be a regular at this, certainly not a homeless drunk. Not at all like the one he and his homies had found sleeping in the dumpster a couple of months back. He was remembering how they had thrown a lit gas rag into the dumpster and then jammed a stick into the hasp of the dumpster lid. That old fucker woke up with quite a start, once the flames got to him, and he made that big metal dumpster dance all around the alley before he was finally quiet.
Watching her face for any sign of waking, he crouched over her and rested his hand flat against her stomach.
No movement.
Slowly, he slid his hand down her belly and then over the mound of her pubis to the bottom of her skirt. Then, up under her skirt until he was touching her high on the inside of her thigh.
Her skin felt like ice from the cool night air. He squeezed her hard thigh once then dove his fingers for the crotch of her panties, prying underneath and into the tangle of her pubic hair.
Still, she didn't move. His fingers traced along the folds of her sex, parting the matted hair, and then one, two fingers penetrated her, searching for her warm, wet insides.
But she wasn't warm inside. Once he had his finger buried inside of her, he realized how cold she was. Terribly cold. And even though he worked his finger back and forth in her, she wasn't at all wet.
"She's like a fuckin' corpse,” he murmured.
That was when she opened her eyes. In that instant, staring into her long dead eyes, Jeremy knew she was a corpse, and something far worse.
Her thighs clamped together just as he jerked his hand back, trapping him in a cold vice of steel. He felt the bones of his wrist rasping together when she clenched her muscles there, the pain shooting all the way up his arm.
Before he could cry out, she had him by the throat, cutting off his air with cold, bony fingers. Her long fingernails dug into the soft flesh of his neck and Jeremy felt the hot trickle of his own blood around her fingers.
"Still think I'm gorgeous, Jeremy?" she asked, smiling to reveal the two long canines.
"Do you want to do to me what you did to that old woman?" she laughed, teasing him.
He stared at her open mouth, at the two long glistening teeth, and knew he was going to die, knew all of the movies he had ever seen and all of the stories he had ever heard about vampires were true, after all. But the thing he knew most was that he had brought himself to this end. All of the terrible things he had done in his short life had accumulated like a debt overdue, and this beautiful vampire had come to collect.
He didn't even struggle when she pulled him down, licking his neck through the lattice of her fingers, the tip of her tongue slithering around to find his pulsing jugular vein.
“Ah...sweet Jeremy,” she whispered, "Give us a taste, little boy,” and sank her teeth into his throat.
There was only a moment's sharp pain, and then the lips and tongue that had felt so cold were suddenly warm. It felt good to give in to her.
Not good like he used to feel when he was a little boy coming out of Sunday school. Good like the time behind the bushes when he stood there buttoning his pants and looking down at the drunken woman. Good like the way the old drunk's muffled screams from inside the dumpster had helped to clear his clouded mind, all of his anger and frustration washed away by the cleansing fire.
He was remembering all of the bad things he had done that had felt so good, flashing by like pieces of a dream, when he noticed a very bright light behind him.
Jeremy turned to the light, and then had to turn away because of its intensity. And now he was up above, looking down at himself cradled between the vampire’s thighs.
She was slowly rocking him in her arms and nursing at the wound in his neck. But he didn't care about that anymore. All he cared about was the light. He had to go to the light.
Rising up higher and higher until he could no longer make out the details of the two figures in the backseat of the car, he turned again toward the light.
This time he could bear the intensity of it, and he moved toward it.
He was in a tunnel now, a long, beautiful tunnel. He knew he had to go through the tunnel to get to the light. But he wasn't afraid. Someone would be there to help him find his way and protect him while he made his journey through the beautiful tunnel. He didn't know who, but he knew they would be there, and he felt safe. The walls were made of shiny stones, and it seemed he knew each of the stones, as if the stones were beings from his past, from his life.
"That's it! There are people here with me. My Granma and my Uncle Wilbur are here with me," and the beginning of the light was only a little bit further now.
They both took him by the hand and led him toward the light, his grandmother smiling at him the way she used to when he was a little boy and she was still alive.
Then she seemed to notice something about him, something she didn't like, and her smile turned to a grimace.
"Jeremy!" Granma said to him. "What's that mark on your neck?"
"It's nothing, Granma. Really, it's nothing. Let's hurry and go to the light."
And now Granma was weeping, and old Uncle Wilbur was shaking his head.
"You can't come with us, Jeremy,” Uncle Wilbur was saying. "You have to go back down there,” pointing back down the tunnel toward the darkness.
"But I don't belong there anymore, Uncle Wilbur. I belong here with you,” Jeremy was weeping now. He knew now what the light was, and he knew what was waiting for him in the darkness, too.
Granma was sniffing back her tears, composing herself to speak. But, when she spoke, it wasn't his Granma anymore. It was a man, a very old man.
"You are marked for all eternity and can never come into the light. You are doomed to wander the earth, apart from your body, to never know peace and never to rest."
The old man and his Uncle Wilbur turned from him and moved into the light, their silhouettes slowly fading away until they were gone, absorbed by its intensity. An unseen force struck Jeremy in the chest, and he flew backward down the tunnel. He picked himself up, trembling and alone in the tunnel. He felt terribly cold. Looking down, he saw that he was naked.
He looked around, a frantic feeling in his throat telling him he wasn't alone. All the shiny stones were changing. Where once they had been beautiful, now they were hideous to see, covered with an oozing slime.
Some of them were even alive, their slippery surfaces reflecting the terrible faces of all manners of demons and monsters inside. And they were whispering to him.
"You're with us now, Jeremy,” they said. "No more pretty light for you, little boy,” and the surfaces of the stones became portholes out of which the creatures started to emerge, pulling themselves out of their cramped vaults, stretching and growing into huge and gruesome shapes.
The woman from the bus stop was there, crawling out of one of the bottom chambers. Her dress was still hiked up over her rump, and once she had struggled uncertainly to her feet, she made a drunken effort at modesty, trying in vain to tug it down over her plump hips, except she had grown a long reptilian tail. It protruded from her rump and dangled down to drag the floor, whipping back and forth in the slime. It wasn't the only new equipment she had, either. In front, a long penis jutted out from the juncture of her thighs.
"You know. I caught pneumonia that night, Jeremy,” she said. "I died a week later. You shouldn't have left me lying there, half naked and my coat underneath me."
She clucked her tongue and wagged a finger at him. She grasped her new equipment at its base and waved it at him.
"It's your turn to bend over now, little boy,” she said, grinning at him.
The old drunk was there, too, his body charred and blackened, his clothes hanging in scorched strips from where they clung to his brittle flesh. He rolled and scooted out of his chamber, leaving shards of his burned body to litter the slimy floor of the tunnel.
He straightened up, skin creaking and cracking, and looked at Jeremy, smiling.
"I got something for you, son,” he giggled, holding a lighter under an old oily rag. "Payback’s a motherfucker, ain't it, boy?" and tossed the lit rag at the boy.
Jeremy jumped back, the rag landing at his feet. One of the old drunk's fingers still clung to it, writhing where the flames seared it.
He looked up at the two creatures standing in front of him, exaggerated caricatures of the people he had wronged. Behind them gathered an army of unspeakable things, misshapen heads peeking over the shoulders of the two in front.
"Come on, Jeremy,” the woman said, waving her outsized penis at him. "Let's have some fun,” and the army of creatures began advancing down the tunnel toward him.
Jeremy ran, running away from the monsters and running away from the light. They were chasing after him, laughing and cursing him, and he ran faster, his feet slipping and sliding as he tried to get traction in the slime that had oozed down from the stones to cover the floor.
He fell. His hands stretched out to break his fall but slid helplessly on the filthy floor, and he landed hard on his face. They were on him before he could get up. Their laughs and screams filled his ears, blocking out his own screams of fear that quickly turned to screams of agony.
The woman fell hard against his back, and he felt the searing pain of her entry. She grunted, shoving into him, and her long tail whipped around, lashing his thighs and outstretched arms with razor sharp barbs that tore at his flesh.
The old man had retrieved the burning rag and now approached him from the front on hands and knees. "You know, when my hair caught on fire, I could feel my brain cooking inside my skull,” he said matter of factly. "Tell me if it feels the same to you,” and he methodically set the fringes of Jeremy's hair ablaze, moving the rag from place to place each time the hair caught and burned.
"I want to die... I want to die..." he cried out. A voice, strong and loud cut through all of the laughter of his tormentors and his own screams of pain. "You are dead, Jeremy, and this is just the beginning..."
And then he was back in the alley, running and running, past the Camaro, where the vampire was still feeding on his lifeless body, out into the street at the end of the alley, right into the path of an oncoming car. He froze, like a deer in headlights, instinctively throwing up his arms, and braced for the impact.
But there was none. One moment the car was inches away from him, and the next it was past him, moving on down the street, and he was still standing there, arms raised in a desperate effort to protect himself.
He looked down at his legs, sure they should be bloody mangled stumps after impacting the front of the car. But there was nothing there. He held up his hands in front of his face. But there were no hands, no arms to see. He wasn't there.
From a long way off, he heard the mingled laughter of the demons that had tormented him and chased him out of the tunnel.
Jeremy started running again.

Lydia sucked at the jagged wound she had torn in the young boy's neck, feeling her limbs growing warmer and more powerful as his blood flowed into her mouth.
He had given into her so easily, barely resisting when she pulled him to her.
But then, they all did. She was careful in her selection of victims, picking and stalking those that had much to die for, much to atone for.
Once she found one like this boy she carefully planted the seeds of submission in their minds. In the weeks she had been stalking him, every time she saw in his thoughts one of the many wicked things he had done in his short life, she buried a small suggestion in there, along with that vivid memory, that some day soon he would have to atone.
A seed so small it wasn't even a conscious part of the memory. It just lay there, another dormant wrinkle in the gray mass of his brain, waiting for the right stimulus to become part of the memory of his atrocities.
That was why she had made him think about all of those things in the moment of the attack; brought all of those images to his mind, along with the idea that this was how he must pay for those sins. Pay with his blood. Pay with his life. And the part that made her smile, made her lips curl back around the pulsing wound, was that he felt - he believed - this idea of atonement came from inside himself and not from her. The seeds she had nourished over the weeks had blossomed into the belief that he was damned, and this was his just punishment.
They were all such fools. Almost all of her victims went this way. Didn't they know their filthy God would forgive them? Isn't that what their grubby little priests told them, that their God was a forgiving God? Didn't they know even the least attempt to resist could save their immortal souls? Were they really so easily duped by a little trickery of the mind when eternity was at stake?
Yes, they were. Time and again, for more than fifty years, she had been leading her victims to this end. Cheating them of eternal rest and cheating the terrible light of another soul.
It made her feel good and it made her feel strong.
She bit deeper into the boy's neck, tearing the flesh open more, and then gashing a longer opening in the jugular with the razor sharp edge of her canines. He was dying, and the blood was coming slower now. She could feel the beat of his heart getting slower and fainter, until it was just an anemic imitation of what had been, just a moment before, a young, strong organ.
And then he died.
The light had opened up above them, and Lydia felt his soul separating from the corpse she held in her arms and between her legs. His dead fingers were still trapped inside of her and she wiggled her hips, pressing them deeper into her warming flesh, relishing the moment of cheating the light, of cheating Him.
Now she had to suck at the wound to make the blood come. There was no longer any pressure behind it and it needed coaxing to come into her mouth. She squeezed his corpse in her strong arms, feeling the bones inside of him crack, and was rewarded with another gush of his lifeblood.
Busy as she was wringing the last few drops from her night's feast, she almost didn't see the shadow of his spirit racing back down the alley, fleeing from the light. It was only a momentary blur in the corner of her eye.
She pulled her face away from the corpse, peering down the alley, and saw him come to a halt in the middle of the street, saw the car pass through the shadow of his spirit. She focused her keen vision to see beyond this world and into the other world she was also a part of. She could make out the shocked look on his face. And then he started running again, running aimlessly into the early morning darkness.
"Now he's beginning to understand what has happened to him,” she thought.
Pleased with the new evil she had made, she threw back her head to laugh at the last glimmers of the disappearing light above her.
That's when she saw him standing there.

He was sleeping on the couch, his head right next to the front door, and the hollow sound of the newspaper thudding against it woke Aaron from a restless sleep.
"Gotta get a new bed,” he mumbled, rolling over on the hard cushions and trying to forget the intrusion into his troubled sleep. But it was no use. The cushions had shifted under him as he rolled, the center one popping out and bouncing to the floor.
"Damn!" he hissed, throwing back his cover and rolling to follow the cushion off the couch. He crawled to his hands and knees and then stood, swaying this way and that, his feet tangled in the sweaty blanket. Tired and frustrated, he kicked to free himself and stumbled away from the pile, catching himself with one hand on the doorknob before he fell.
"Gotta get a new bed,” he said again, and then, "Yeah, as soon as I win the lottery.
"The problems of money and not having enough poked their ugly heads around the corner of his mind, and he instinctively shooed them away, preferring the much more depressing and self-pitying problems of losing his girlfriend, which sprang back into his head as soon as he had chased the money things away.
"That's better,” he said. "Now there’s a more hopeless ache. After all, I can always earn more money."
The end of his relationship with Angela was not something he could do anything about. She was intelligent, beautiful, goal oriented, extremely faithful to her Catholic faith, and was looking for a hell of a lot more in a relationship than he was able to give.
That was why they had parted ways. The same things in her that made her able to accomplish everything she had ever set out to do, coupled with her deep sense of compassion, is what had made their relationship possible in the first place. He was her reclamation project for the summer; her handsome, aging, recovering drug addict, romantic summer interlude.
They had met at the end of his second month of clean time, and all that was in his mind the moment before he met her was, "Sixty days. Sixty days." The mantra was something his sponsor kept telling him would lead him to failure.
"You ain't got sixty fuckin' days, yet, motherfucker,” David would say. "As of right now you got," and he'd fill in the blank with the days, hours and minutes since the last time he had put a needle in his arm.
"You keep thinkin' sixty fuckin' days and you'll be bangin' fuckin' dope tomorrow, motherfucker." Like most of the people at the meetings, "fuck" and its redundancies was David's favorite word.
But he didn't hold it against him or the others. No matter how rough their speech was, and no matter how they dressed - just like they did when they were high, only bathed and laundered - or what kind of dead-end job most of them filled to pay the bills, they had something he didn't have, and wanted desperately; clean time.
Meeting Angela was like a breath of fresh air in a room that had been closed up for too long. She was young and alive. Full of the energy of youth and channeled into such clean and wholesome pursuits.
He had fallen in love with her in a matter of days. That's when he knew he had to tell her he was a drug addict. Just because he had quit putting heroin in his veins didn't change that.
At first, he thought she understood what that meant. But, as the days passed, and he reached sixty, and then ninety, and then one hundred and eighty days, she seemed to grow impatient with him. She started hinting his job wasn't good enough for him. Started hinting he was too smart to be digging postholes, setting posts and stretching rolls of chain link fence. Then, she was telling him it was time to move on, acting like the last six months had been some kind of vacation for him.
That's when he admitted to himself she didn't have a clue about him.
She didn't understand that it was all he could do to get up and make it to that job every day, and come home and fight the urge to go out and find dope all night long. Then get up and do it all over again.
She thought all you did was quit shooting dope, build a few fences for muscle tone, then buy a couple of suits and return to the Real World. She couldn't see he was light years away from being able to handle that kind of pressure. Just the thought of deadlines, meetings, computer literacy, and all that came with it left him in a cold sweat with the urge to hit the streets and find sweet salvation.
It didn't matter he was about two species more evolved than the fence contractor he labored for. It didn't matter what books he read.
All that mattered was today he didn't bang dope. If that was too much, then at least for the next hour he wasn't going to bang dope. Any more stress than knowing how many post holes were yet to be dug before the posts could be set, or how much of each paycheck had to be set aside for rent - his only recurring debt - would probably put him back on the streets.
When he finally sat her down and had finished explaining it to her in very exacting detail, she had actually blinked and pulled her head back, startled. He could see in her eyes that she was seeing him the way he really was for the very first time, and he felt ashamed.
He had been hiding behind the facade of the tragic intellectual who had succumb to one of the diseases of choice of their society. Now, she saw him as he really was; a junkie. A junkie who would vomit blood all over your walls if you let him get off in your living room. That's what years of "the rush" did to you. At first, you just threw up. Later, when you were serious about your addiction, food wasn't all that important anymore. But "the rush" still had to be fed, and so the little blood vessels in your throat ruptured from the constant retching, and then you were spewing blood and bile.
She just sat there, staring at him for the longest time, Then she got up and left, without a word.
That had been three days ago, and he hadn't heard from her since. She was gone. She wasn't coming back.
Angela had gone back to the world of the living and her beach fling with the guy in suspended animation was over.
They had made love only once. It was a present to him the night they got together after the meeting where his sponsor had given him his six month chip. They had ended up back at his place, in his bed. He was shocked when he realized he was making love with a twenty eight year old virgin.
He wished now she had kept her virginity. Since she had walked out, every time he touched the bed they made love in his mind flooded with the images of it. He had tried changing the sheets, and then the blankets and bedspread. But nothing helped. She was still in his bed. It had gotten to where he only went into the bedroom to change clothes.
"Okay, Aaron, it's time to think about something else,” he told himself, and turned the little chrome button that unlocked the door, twisted the handle and opened it just enough to let the paper leaning against it slide across the threshold.
As soon as he bent down to pick it up, the moment he touched it, he knew something was wrong.
"This is his last newspaper,” the voice inside his head told him.
He knew without asking that it didn't mean the last newspaper of the night, or the last newspaper in his bag. It meant it was the last newspaper his paperboy was ever going to throw.
Aaron opened the door wide and stepped out onto the second story walkway that ran the whole length of his apartment building.
"That's where he stood when he threw this paper,” he told himself, looking down at the spot where Jeremy had stood moments before. His eyes followed the path Jeremy had taken out between the two buildings that made up his complex.
He walked the few steps to the end of the walkway and looked out to the alley.
"Shit! I forgot to put the top up on the Camaro." He was thinking what a mess the wet night air was going to make of his upholstery when he saw them moving in the backseat of the car.
He squinted to make out the shapes. Yes, it was Jeremy, alright. With some long legged blonde. And he had his hand up under her skirt and she was kissing his neck.
"That little creep. In the backseat of my car!" He was about to call out to them, tell them to get the hell out of there. But the words caught in his throat.
Something told him not to.
"Watch,” the voice in his head said. "You're his only witness."
He peered into the night, his eyes slowly adjusting to darkness. She wasn't kissing him. But she couldn't be doing what he thought she was doing.
He could see Jeremy's face, turned away from the woman. The look on his face was one of resignation. There was something else about the boy's face that made it look strangely unfamiliar. He struggled to define the look. Lifeless. The paperboy's face looked so pale, so drained of color.
His face was drained of blood.
"My God!" he whispered, recoiling from the railing and stepping back into the shadow of the awning. He wanted to run back into his apartment, slam the door, and bury his head in the blankets. But he knew he couldn't.
"I'm his only witness,” he told himself, and forced his eyes to see what his mind refused to believe; the woman was holding Jeremy to her and drinking his blood.
Aaron could see the red smear on his neck and on her lips. He could see her cheeks puffing and then drawing in, and her throat working as she took gulp after gulp of his blood.
A question started to frame in his mind, but the voice inside answered before it was fully formed.
"What kind of..."
"A vampire."
"There's no such thing as..."
"Then what is it doing to the boy?"
"I don't know..."
"Yes, you do. It's drinking his blood. He is going to die and there's nothing you can do to stop it. But you have to stay here and watch and be witness to this. So you can..."
The voice trailed off.
"So I can what?"
"I don't know..."
It pulled its head back for an instant, and Aaron saw the flash of its long bloody teeth before it bit viciously into the paperboy's throat again, tearing at the gaping wound. Its long tongue slithered out, lapping up the blood that poured from the enlarged wound. Then it fastened its mouth once more to the dying boy's neck.
Aaron felt his stomach flip flop and the bile rise up in his throat. The urge to vomit reminded him of the rush, and he suddenly found himself wondering where he could connect this time of the morning.
"Stop it.” He shook his head and forced his mind back to the moment.
It was squeezing the boy. Aaron heard the bones cracking and saw the boy's face fill with color for a moment before the vampire drained him again, its mouth puffing out, filling once again, and then swallowing.
Finally, it finished with him, and pulled back from his ripped throat, craning its neck to look down the alley. It seemed amused by something, a smirk on its bloody lips, and then it threw back its head, as if to laugh. But it didn't laugh. It just stared into the shadows where he stood, no longer hidden.

It was a man. A man about six feet tall, maybe one hundred eighty pounds. Short hair, graying at the temples.
He was standing back in the shadows in his boxers holding a newspaper in his hand.
He had seen everything. Lydia knew he had seen by the look of revulsion and disbelief on his face.
"I should have thought about that.” There were bound to be early risers sitting up waiting for the newspaper. "I should have just swooped down and plucked the boy off of his bicycle in the street."
But then, there would have been no tempting him. No opportunity for his dark side to emerge.
No soul stolen from the light. No joy in the kill. Besides, her senses should have alerted her there was someone lurking in the shadows up there. In fifty years, no human had ever passed unnoticed. How did this one escape her senses? No matter. Now she just had to tidy up the details and get on with the night.
The man would have to die. No time to seduce this victim. Just fly up there over the rail before he has a chance to react, grab him by the throat before he has a chance to scream, and break his neck.

Aaron felt frozen in place. He knew it had seen him, was watching him, and he wanted desperately to move. But he couldn't. He thought about the dogs he had stared down in the neighborhoods where they built the fences. If you let them see your fear, then they had you. He wondered if that worked against vampires.
He felt it reaching out for him with its mind.
"Who are you?" He found himself yearning to respond, but struggled to let the question go unanswered.
"Why can't I feel you, stranger?"
Aaron heard the questions and felt her probing, trying to get inside of him. He willed his mind to go blank, something he had been doing since he was a child, whenever the need had arisen.
Then it spoke to his mind again.
"I want you to stand there and wait for me. I have something very special I want to share with you, but you must wait for me."
He heard the words, and for a part of a second, he welcomed their soft, haunting quality. The beginning of a warm, safe sensation enveloped him.
Aaron saw it slide out from under the boy's body and fly up into the air. It was to the height of the landing where he stood, and then it rushed forward, arms outstretched to embrace him.
It was already over the railing, rushing through the short space to get to him. It held out its arms to him as a mother might to a lost child, and the look on its face reminded him of cherubs in museum paintings.
But in the last instant before it clutched him, he shrugged off the warmth of its words, realizing that embracing it would mean his death. The soft cherubs features faded and he saw the blood smeared all over its mouth and chin, and the long fangs it couldn't hide so short a time after feeding, and it occurred to him that it had floated weightlessly up from the backseat of his car to come to him, and reality came flooding back.
Aaron ducked under its outstretched arms, cut to the left and ran for the open door. His heart was pounding in his chest so hard he was sure it would explode before he got inside of the apartment, or before it landed on his back and ripped out his throat.

Lydia was stunned by his quickness. She hadn't used all of her speed because she didn't think it was necessary. No mortal had ever broken the trance of her spells. Not in fifty years of hunting. Her feet hit the landing and she turned on her heels toward the fleeing man. It would be close, but…
Her arm stretched out for him, fingernails morphing to long claws that almost touched his back before he was inside. She jerked her hand back as he swung the door shut, slamming it in her face.
The rage of being foiled by this human began to boil up inside of her, but was quickly supplanted by The Pain. That’s what they called it.
Not two inches from her nose, bolted to the wooden door, was a silver crucifix. Not the ornamental kind, either. Lydia knew from the burning knife of pain that shot through her brain that this one had been blessed by that pig in Rome.
She recoiled in fear, her hands flying up to cover her face, and turned away from the door.
"I must collect myself,” she thought. "I must gather my wits and get inside there so I can finish this."
She caused the fog to boil up around her, and she directed it to cover the window next to the apartment’s door. Once there was a thick bank of it and she had prepared herself, she called him to the window from the picture in her mind of him standing there behind the door, trembling. Her magic was strong, and now that she had taken time to prepare herself, she knew he would do what she asked.
She saw him move toward the window and saw him looking into the fog, and she stepped into the mist and up to the window.

Aaron stood with his back against the door, trying to get his breathing under control.
This wasn't happening. This just wasn't happening. Any moment, he expected someone to yell, "Cut!" and see Bela Lugosi lead the vampire on his front porch off to makeup.
"I'm safe in here, right? Let's see...", he wracked his brain for every detail of every book he'd ever read and every movie he’d ever seen about vampires.
"That's right. They can't cross a threshold unless they're invited." He remembered the crucifix nailed to the door, the one Angela had given to him and insisted he hang on the door "to protect you from sin”, she had said. He had done it, but more to please his girlfriend than for the protection.
"It's blessed by the Pope,” she had proudly proclaimed.
He remembered the image that had conjured up to him; the old man of the church walking into a roomful of crosses and vaguely waving his hand at them and mumbling "bless you" in Latin.
He wasn't thinking that now. He was, in fact, thinking about dropping down on his knees and thanking God in Heaven for creating a Catholic church so there would be a Pope to bless the cross he had hung on his door to placate his girlfriend.
In that moment, a lifetime of agnosticism that had grown into a firm faith in atheism was wiped away. If there were vampires on earth, his mind automatically reasoned, there was definitely God in Heaven.
"But the immediate problem is more one of survival than the philosophical arguments to prove or disprove the existence of God,” he reminded himself. Whenever he became excited or afraid, the smug intellectual emerged, shooting quips from the hip. It was automatic, and had been the cause of many a bar room scrape in the days before he gave up the bars, when a moment’s silence would have better fended off the insults of a drunken rowdy. Instead, the words would just tumble out of his mouth, leaving the average bar room aggressor with nothing to say and no option but to take the first swing.
He stepped away from the door and rushed over to look out of the window above his bed on the couch.
He expected to see her standing there, jimmying with the window lock or something, but all he saw outside of his window was a thick white mist. He hadn't seen fog that thick even in San Francisco, and rightly guessed the vampire was responsible. She stepped out of the fog and up to the glass. Aaron jumped back.
"Let me in,” she pleaded, her lips moving to mouth the words, but the sounds carried from her mind through the glass to his.
"Take that horrible cross off of your door and let me come inside with you." Her eyes pleaded with him.
"I...I...No, I can't,” he mumbled, not at all sure he couldn't, only following some deep instinct that told him to keep her outside.
She was so beautiful. He had never seen anyone so beautiful before in all of his life. Her eyes were a deep blue, making him forget how they had been two glowing red coals when she looked up at him from the car.
Staring at those seductive eyes, he forgot about the car, and about Jeremy. All he knew focused on the beautiful secrets hidden inside of those eyes, secrets she was promising to share with him if he would just open the door.
Such a small thing to do. Just open the door.
Aaron looked down at her body, admiring the swell of her firm breasts under the knit top.
"Is that what you want?" she asked, her hands pulling the clingy top up over her breasts, exposing them to him, and then cupped them in her hands, as if holding them out, offering them to him.
"Let me come inside with you and I'll let you have all of my pleasures. I can make you feel things you never knew were possible." She pressed herself against the window, squashing her chest on the cold glass.
He stared transfixed at her perfect breasts, and felt himself begin to grow hard. He wanted her, wanted her like he had never wanted any woman before in his life. He knew it would be special with her, that there were secrets of her body no other woman had ever possessed. All he had to do was open the door.
She squeezed her breasts again, rubbing her hard nipples against the glass, doing a slow dance for him. That's when he noticed her claws.
Staring at her long, talon-like fingers, he slowly began to remember all he had seen, and how she had tried to attack him on the porch. It was as if he had been trapped under black water, and he was slowly swimming back up, following the light of truth until he broke through to the surface, filling his lungs with the clean, crisp air of reality.
He smiled at her, knowing her game was up.
"I'm sure there's a lot you could show me,” he said to her, folding his arms over his chest. "And I'm sure you have many, many 'secrets' to share. But, you know, I think I've seen the whole show, down in the backseat of the car.
“I've gotta tell you, while I am thoroughly impressed, I'm really not interested. Not to mention the fact I’m already involved with someone else. So, why don't you go to Hell?"

She had forgotten about her claws. Her fingernails had instinctively morphed into the vampire's talons when she had reached out for him outside the door. She had remembered to wipe away all of the blood from her kill, and calmed down enough for the vampire's fire to go out of her eyes. But she had forgotten about her claws, and that is what broke her spell.
The rage rose inside of her. It boiled up and out of every pore in her body. She wanted to smash the glass between them, grab this human garbage with her talons and tear him into little tiny pieces. But she couldn't. The fire came back into her eyes, extinguishing the clear blue she had been born with, and her fangs grew long and pointed, dripping saliva and blood. A piece of a name escaped from his shrouded mind.
"Ann...no, Angela. Yes, that's her name, isn't it? The one you're so deeply involved with?" She saw the surprise in his face that she had been able to read his mind. He didn't know she had guessed at the second half of the name, or that now that he was alerted, his thoughts were even more of an enigma to her.
"I'll have to go visit Angela when I'm done with you. Believe me when I tell you your girlfriend will be dead before the sun rises,” she lied, hoping to break his concentration with fear and doubt.
The man staggered back away from the window, realizing the mistake he had made. "I'm making jokes with a vampire,” he said, shaking his head from side to side, as if that would clear his head, as if that would lessen the pressure she exerted to penetrate his mind. He began repeating the Lord's Prayer.
Lydia recoiled in disgust and flew into a rage.
"You fool of a human!" she hissed at him. "I will have you. I will have your blood and I will rip your body apart, one small piece at a time before you die. No one has ever defied me, and I swear by Satan you will not be the first."
She spat a bloody clot onto the glass.
"Hide behind your trinkets and prayers for now, foolish little man. But make no mistake, I'll be back for you, every night until I have you. And for every night that you escape me, someone you know will die, beginning with your precious Angela."
Her anger began to subside once she had made her threats, and her features softened, more and more, until she knew that it was the beautiful and forever young woman that stood facing him again.
"Oh, just one more thing before I go."
The casual tone of her voice caught him off guard, just as she had planned. He stopped praying and looked at her.
She stared back, deep into his eyes, concentrating all of her power into the next two words.
"Forget...Sleep..." and she faded back into the mist and was gone.
She watched his eyes fluttering shut, the strength of her suggestions overpowering him. She stepped back into the mist and watched him as he stared, puzzled, out the window. Then he shook his head, no longer caring about the fog, and fumbled his way to the couch where he lay down and fell fast asleep.
"Oh, the things I will do to him!" she hissed, walking away from his door. She used the stairs this time, in case any of his neighbors might see her fly down from the landing.
The last thing she wanted was more complications. This man had already caused her enough to last into tomorrow night.
She had never left a loose end like this before, in all of her years of hunting, and she didn't like doing it now. But there was no choice.
"Besides, he won't remember anything until he opens his door tomorrow night when I knock. It will probably all come back to him when he sees me, but then it will be too late." She was thinking how surprised he would look when he opened the door and she reached in and grabbed him by the throat. "I won't have to cross his stinking threshold for that,” she mused.
She reached the bottom of the steps and started down the sidewalk to where she had left the boy's body, and then stopped.
"Damn. I don't even know his name." She stood for a moment wondering how important it would be, knowing his name. What if he wasn't home tomorrow night? What if she had to go looking for him?
Normally, if someone she was stalking was anywhere in the city, she would be able to sense where they were and go to them. She hadn't had much luck with this one, though, trying to read his mind. She might actually have to ask someone where she could find him. That was something she had never had to do before.
There was a strength about him that she didn't understand. He had a power she had never encountered before. It gave her an odd sensation in the pit of her stomach and made the hair on the back of her neck tingly. She shrugged the feeling away, unsure what it was.
It was nothing more than the first inkling of fear, something she had not experienced since being born as a vampire.
How would she learn his name?
She started laughing. "It's easy,” she chided herself. "You just have to think like a human."
She walked over to the mailbox and read his name off of the label next to his apartment number.
"Aaron Michaels." She looked up at the apartment where her prey slept. "I'll see you tomorrow night, Aaron."
Once back at the Camaro, she reached into the back seat, plunged her talons into the back of the corpse, wrapping her fingers around its spine, and lifted its sagging weight as if toting a gym bag. She scooped up the paper bag in her other hand and flew straight up into the dark sky.
The ocean was only a block away from where she had killed, and she made for it now, in a hurry to be skimming over the water's surface. Along the way, she let go of the paper bag, hearing it thud onto a rooftop below. Then, she was out over the water. She flew a few miles offshore and began to dispose of the body, absently ripping chunks of flesh away and tossing it down to the dark water. This was how she disposed with most all of her kills, feeding the fish, which would later be caught off of the pier, or by some sport fishing boat, and then eaten by people who might turn out to be her next prey. She was usually quite amused by this circle of death, but not tonight.
Her mind was still back at the apartment landing, going over every tiny detail of her encounter with this strange human.
To begin with, why hadn't she sensed him watching while she was feeding? That had never happened before. And the way he broke her spell and escaped into the apartment. The bad luck of the crucifix on the door. The way he had refused her entry when she had tried to seduce him.
That had been her fault, forgetting about her claws. But no, not entirely. No other human that far under her spell would have noticed if she had grown horns and a tail at that point. How was it that such a small thing brought him out of it so completely?
It was the way he had taunted her that had so completely enraged her. She might have just made him forget and even let him live if he had at least collapsed in fear.
There was nothing to be gained by killing a righteous man. The light would accept him with heralds and trumpets, mocking her attempt to do evil.
Yet, he knew she was a vampire and he stood there and made fun of her. The memory of it caused the rage to well up in her again, and she twisted wildly in the air, giving vent to a horrible scream that shattered the silence of the night. All that was left of the paperboy's body was his head and the trailing shreds of his spine clasped in her hand.
She swung the head around in a great arc, still twisting and somersaulting across the sky, and let loose. It rocketed away from her, disappearing into the darkness.
Eventually, she began to calm down, and hung in the air, breathing hard from her exertion.
What would she do about this Aaron Michaels? Finally, it came to her. She felt calm and in control of her world again.
         "Alexander. Alexander will know what to do." 

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Reviewers... hmmm....

It's hard not to love them. After all, they hold the fate of your indie book in their hands. When you're an indie published author, you scrape for every bit of publicity you can get. Every mention on the internet can result in one or two sales, every 10 or 20 sales can result in one more review on Amazon. One more review on Amazon can result in 10 or 20 more sales, repeat infinitely...

So, it's daunting, when you're out there looking for people to review your book, and you Google for indie book reviewers, and the top hits show a list of indie reviewers, but by the time you click over to their sites or their blogs, they've already hung out the "Do Not Disturb" sign. They're so inundated with requests from authors to review their work that they've stopped accepting new submissions.

But the quest goes on. I try to find at least one place a day to submit my incredibly awesome, utterly spellbinding novel. Conceited you say?

Well, someone has to say it.

Monday, June 25, 2012

FREE VAMPIRES! TAKE TWO


Better late than never? I wrote earlier about my book, Vampires in Paradise, being available for the next three days as a FREE KINDLE DOWNLOAD. Then there were legions of mixups with Amazon getting that done. It is finally listed at $0.00 on the Amazon page for Kindle download. Sorry for all the mixups on this. Here's the link:


GET IT WHILE IT'S FREE!!!

Sunday, June 24, 2012

FREE VAMPIRES!


Sunday June 24th through Tuesday June 26th, Vampires in Paradise is Free on Kindle Download. The 5 Star Reviews say, “Great Vampire Story!” & “Very Scary. A Good Read.”


GET IT WHILE IT'S FREE!!!

Thursday, June 21, 2012

The First Customer Review is in!

It's on the Amazon page for the paperback edition. Read it HERE.

Five Stars! I'm hoping for more reviews soon.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Live & Learn...

If you're one of those folks who still want to hold the book in your hand, turn the page and all that, and are planning to get a paperback version of Vampires In Paradise, I would appreciate it if you would purchase it through my estore at CreateSpace; HERE.

I make about double the royalty through my estore. Something that would have been nice to know before I steered everyone to the Amazon site.

CreateSpace is an Amazon company, but the Amazon store carries it's own additional overhead cost to me and so I earn less if you buy it through them.

It doesn't affect Kindle sales. The only place you can get a Kindle version is HERE.

The more I pay attention to all of this, the more it all comes clear to me how it all works.

Thanks, and Happy Reading!

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Kindle Edition of Vampires In Paradise Now Available!

Get it HERE. You can also preview all of Chapter One and the first part of Chapter Two using the Look Inside feature.