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Vampires Rule

Kasi Blake




  VAMPIRES RULE

  Kasi Blake

  Vampires Rule

  © Copyright 2011 Kasi Blake

  Cover Art Design by Author Branding Essentials

  www.kasiblake.com

  ****

 

  Chapter One:

  A BOY WITHOUT A HOME

  The vampire stood in the shadows and stared up at the farmhouse he used to call home. No longer the bright sunny yellow his mom had chosen, the exterior had been covered with a muted olive tone. This small difference knocked Jack off balance. Had his brother sold the farm?

  His gaze skimmed over the dark windows—two on the bottom level and four on top—searching for signs of life. The porch light glowed with an eerie, almost palpable presence that warned Jack to stay hidden, but he had to know if his brother was gone. Focused on the task, he walked into the light and crept up the porch steps. He slowly crossed to the huge bay window, and he leaned in to peer through the dirty glass.

  A wild drum solo broke out in Jack’s pocket, startling him. He jumped backwards and tripped, almost falling off the porch before realizing it was only his stupid cell phone. An electric guitar joined in, adding to the horrible racket. He patted his pockets, frantically searching for the thing while he scanned the yard for movement. This wasn’t exactly the covert operation he’d planned. His fingers closed around cold metal, and he answered without checking caller ID. It could only be one of three people, his vampire friends.

  “You’re going to die!” Lily shouted.

  Jack flinched. With a jerk of his hand he put a few inches between the cell and his traumatized ear. Lily’s warning barely registered. His mind was focused on other matters. He was about to break into his childhood home, ten times in ten years. Although no one was around and the house was in a sparsely populated rural area, Jack tried to keep the noise to a minimum. He glanced around again to make sure Lily’s high-pitched freak-out hadn’t stirred up trouble. No telling what creatures lurked nearby.

  “Hello?” Lily yelled, “This is serious! According to the cards you’re going to die within the next three hours.”

  “Well, I already died once. What’s the big deal about doing it twice?”

  Jack went to the front door and considered it from every angle. Under normal circumstances a vampire couldn’t enter a house uninvited, but as long as Billy kept something belonging to him and didn’t sell the place, Jack could go in whenever he wanted. He waved his hand over the doorknob and heard the lock click. Billy hadn’t moved. Relief and excitement flooded his system as the door swung open, silently inviting him inside. Cool. No matter how many times he used his powers, the same tiny thrill rocked his senses. A short-lived laugh escaped his dry throat.

  “This isn’t funny, Jackpot!”

  A scowl replaced the smile and he warned Lily, “If you don’t stop yelling at me, I’m hanging up.”

  “You have to stay away from her.”

  “Away from who?”

  “That girl in the fuzzy pink sweater, she’s the reason you die tonight.”

  Jack looked around the empty porch, confused.

  Lily babbled on. “She has long hair, but the color is kind of hard to pinpoint. I’d say it’s either dark blonde or light brown. Doesn’t matter, I guess. She’s short and thin but not really skinny, and her eyes are deep blue. She’s not classically pretty, not to me anyway, and she’s definitely not your type. Just stay clear of her. She’s trouble.”

  “The cards told you all that?” Dry amusement altered his tone.

  “Don’t be a smartass. After I did the cards, I had a vision. This is serious stuff. When you see the girl—and you will—walk the other way.” There was a short pause. Sometimes Lily hesitated on purpose for dramatic effect. It made his skin itch. “No. When you see her, I want you to run the other way.”

  “Whatever.”

  “Promise me.”

  He shrugged. “I promise.”

  “Say it like you mean it.”

  He rubbed his tired eyes. The house called to him. More than anything he wanted to go inside and take his annual trip through the rooms, mentally relive better days, but Lily was ruining everything with her kooky vision crap. His brother might show at any second, putting an end to his visit. Time slipped through his fingers like tiny grains of sand. Every muscle in Jack’s body tightened.

  “I promise,” he said. “I swear on my grave. Okay? Do you need it in blood?”

  “You don’t have to get snippy. I’m only trying to help.”

  “You caught me in the middle of something important.”

  “What?” He could practically see her twirling strands of curly blonde hair. “Where are you? What are you doing?”

  He disconnected the call and returned the cell to his pocket. For a moment he stayed where he was on the porch and tried to picture the mystery girl Lily had described. His mind could only produce a vague rendition of a fairly pretty girl. Lily shouldn’t worry. He had no intention of taking a stroll in the sunlight or getting into a fight with a hunter. No way was he dying tonight, especially not because of some random girl.

  He took a deep breath and entered the house. Each bittersweet step reminded him of what he’d lost. He’d give anything to have his old life back. Anything.

  The foyer hadn’t changed. A pained smile stretched his lips thin when he noticed the yellowing wallpaper, cream-colored with tiny purple flowers. There was a small coat closet to the right and an arch next to it that led to the kitchen. His mother had put a small table on the left because his father wanted to drop his keys the second he entered the house. An arch leading to the living room beckoned to him, but Jack didn’t want to venture into there yet. The stairs with the handmade railing he used to slide down as a kid was directly in front of him. Maybe he should go upstairs, take a look at his old room.

  His heart ached for his family. On an average Thursday night like this his mom would be in the kitchen, cleaning up after dinner while his dad watched television, beer in hand. Depending on their ages, Jack and Billy would either be doing homework, wrestling in their shared room, or running around town with friends.

  With the exception of Billy, the entire Creed family had been murdered by a psychotic werewolf.

  Jack strolled through his former home, his fingertips skimming the tops of possessions, stuff that had been passed down to Billy. He loved touching tangible evidence that once upon a time he had been human. His brother had kept everything: Jack’s old baseball cards, his variety of sports trophies, and a photo of him the night of his Junior Prom. He picked up the frame and stared at the picture. The name of his date stayed just out of reach. He remembered his mom insisting on taking the photo. Guilt over giving her a hard time made his heart sink... another regret in a long line.

  Jack tripped over a discarded book on the living room floor. A curse word slipped off his tongue. Billy wasn’t much of a housekeeper. There was an inch of dust on practically everything in sight, and Billy’s dirty clothes were scattered around as if he didn’t know where his closet was located.

  A reluctant smile stretched Jack’s lips. It froze at the sound of footsteps on the porch. He sniffed. Billy was home. Now what?

  Jack spun around in the center of the living room in a full-on panic, needing a quick place to hide. Although he could move faster than any human on the planet, he couldn’t make it out the back door without Billy hearing him. Besides, he couldn’t resist the temptation to see his brother.

  A key rattled in the lock.

  Jack held his breath.

  The front door opened.

  Jack zipped across the foyer and jumped into the coat closet. He left the door open a
crack to allow him a narrow visual. For some reason Jack expected Billy to be a fifteen-year-old boy, but his brother had passed him in years and in inches. Jack silently calculated. Billy was twenty-five now. He had become a man, a pinnacle Jack would never reach.

  Billy entered the foyer with a canvas bag slung over his shoulder and a handful of envelopes in his hand. He dropped the bag while looking at the mail. Piece by piece, he went through it, tossing each envelope to the corner table after giving it careful consideration. He stopped abruptly, lifted his head, and frowned. His eyes scanned the room as if he too was vampire and could sense his brother’s return.

  Fresh from a fight, there was a rip in his jeans, a bruise on his cheek, and a bleeding cut above his left eye.

  “Hello?” Billy called out, hesitant. “Is someone here?” He slowly revolved before saying a single word beneath his breath, a word that sent shockwaves through the vampire in the closet.

  “Jack.”

  Jack’s eyes widened. He caught an audible gasp with his hand and sank deeper into the tiny room, allowing darkness to temporarily devour him, but he still felt exposed as if Billy could see him through the door. Hiding in the closet had been a dumb idea. Hell, the whole breaking into his family’s home had shown a serious lack of good judgment.

  If his vampire friends ever found out he’d risked exposure, they’d tear his head off.

  Billy headed into the living room, and Jack released a slow breath between clenched teeth. Hissss. The scent of Billy’s blood pulled him forward until he had his face pressed into the crack. Tempting. Hunger pangs began deep in his stomach. The ache expanded like ripples when a stone is dropped in still water. His fangs slid forward, protruding from hidden pockets in his gums.

  No, he was not going to hurt his brother. Jack shook his head back and forth hard, gasping for breath and trying to control the monster inside. He couldn’t hurt Billy. His hands clenched into fists. Resting his forehead against the door’s wooden frame, he regulated his breathing. It took a great deal of effort.

  He silently chanted the words again and again. I am not going to kill my brother. I am not going to kill my brother. I am not going to kill my brother.

  Or worse—change him into a vampire.

  Billy returned to the foyer, shook his dark head and mumbled, “Okay. Have it your way, bro.”

  The words sounded almost sinister.

  Jack’s eyes popped open. Of course he had imagined the words, probably a hallucination brought on by lack of food. Billy thought he was dead. There was no way Billy knew he was in the closet. It wasn’t fair! Why did he have to lose his life? A murderous rage climbed to the surface. He tried to calm himself, taking several more deep breaths. He couldn’t afford to lose his temper, not when his brother was this close.

  Billy took the stairs two at a time, and Jack sighed with relief.

  He slowly stepped out of the closet and went to the front door, careful to open it without making a sound. Billy thumped around upstairs. Jack took one last look at his past. In the blink of an eye, he was gone. Before Billy could reach the foyer, Jack was miles away.

  Next stop on the comeback tour: the local graveyard.

  He stood over the grave of a boy named Jack Creed, a boy long ago dead but only temporarily buried. The grave belonged to him, his final resting place. What a joke. He squatted in front of the headstone and traced the letters of his name in the cold, hard granite. It was a repulsive yet necessary tradition.

  Jack’s foul mood sank further south.

  He needed to pull himself together before rejoining his friends. Cowboy didn’t appreciate sentimentality of any kind. The eldest member of the gang (a ripe twenty-two on the day of his death) thought he was bending over backwards as it was to accommodate Jack’s weird thirst for nostalgia by making the annual stop in Nebraska.

  Jack remembered the first time he’d returned to the cemetery with his friends in tow. Lily had freaked out. “It’s bad luck to see your own grave,” she’d said. “Turn around three times and spit to ward off evil. It always works for me.”

  “Silly superstition,” Cowboy insisted with a slight Texan drawl, yet his eyes wandered the graveyard as if he expected ‘evil’ to attack him.

  Summer had been the only one not to give Jack a hard time. She at least tried to be understanding even though she didn’t get it either. The rest of them had adjusted to their second identities long ago, embraced life as vampires. Not Jack. He couldn’t let go of his past.

  Jack lifted his chin and sniffed the air.

  He smelled two things at once, one stronger than the other, but not as pleasant. Because the two odors mixed before invading his nostrils, it took him a moment to mentally decipher the information. Of course it helped when he looked up to see one of them, a girl, standing a few gravestones away.

  He knew her in an instant.

  It was the girl in the fuzzy pink sweater, the one Lily had warned him about. He tried to remember every word Lily said about the girl. There’d been some confusion on her hair color. Jack made a mental note to tell Lily it was like warm honey. It spilled over the girl’s shoulder in soft waves, blocking her face from view so he couldn’t tell if she was pretty or not.

  She stood over a grave, oblivious to his presence.

  What had he promised to do when he saw her? Run? Problem was his feet were glued to the ground. Something about her held him in place, something familiar. He couldn’t move. He didn’t want to move—unless it was to close the distance between them. His fingers itched to touch her. She smelled intoxicating, a lovely floral scent mixed with a hint of sweet fruit.

  The other smell grew stronger, forcing his attention away from the girl. His stomach dropped to his feet, and he quickly scanned the surrounding area. It only took him a moment to find the owner of the offensive smell, a werewolf.

  Jack hated werewolves more than anything else on earth. They were rotting, stupid, stinking animals. As Cowboy often said, “The only good werewolf is a dead werewolf.”

  The werewolf stepped from the bushes, still in human form, but it was just as deadly minus fur and fangs. It had the power to rip apart its prey with invisible claws that only a vampire or another werewolf could see. Jack clenched his teeth to keep the frantic warning in his mouth. There wasn’t anything the girl could do. She couldn’t outrun the beast. She definitely couldn’t win in a fight. That left him as her only means of survival.

  To be killed by a werewolf was horrible, painful beyond description.

  The wolf snarled.

  She jumped to her feet and took a step backwards, her hands stretched out in a defensive maneuver. Jack could hear her heart beat faster. It drummed a hundred and twenty beats a minute and rising. He had to do something, had to save her.

  The werewolf attacked.

  The girl whipped around, bringing her foot up in a hard arc. Her heel hit the werewolf in the face, the force knocking it back a few feet. It growled, and saliva glistened on human teeth. The thing quickly regained its balance and lunged a second time.

  Jack watched in awe as the girl fought the beast. She had the grace of a dancer and the strength of a gymnast. In all his years he hadn’t seen such an incredible sight. Maybe she didn’t need him. Since a single scratch from a werewolf could kill a vampire, he was reluctant to join in. As long as she could handle it, he might as well hang back and watch.

  The werewolf swiped at her with invisible claws and missed.

  Figuring it was on the losing end of a long battle, the werewolf changed form. It seemed to melt. The liquid metal molded into an animal as if invisible hands were working on it. It transformed from man to beast and snarled at her with sharp teeth. Now it was a wolf, complete with fur. The thing’s eyes glowed, liquid gold flashing in triumph. It had the advantage. Hand-to-hand combat would no longer work.

  The girl froze. She and the beast stared into each ot
her’s eyes for what seemed an eternity to Jack. The only movement was the slight lift and fall of the girl’s chest as she took slow, even breaths. Now what?

  Jack didn’t have a choice anymore. He had to save her. There was no one else around. The hell with his promise to Lily. He wasn’t going to let this innocent girl get torn apart by a stinking werewolf when he could do something about it.

  Once he made up his mind to help, he moved fast. In an instant he blocked the girl, using his own body as a shield. He heard her barely audible gasp, and the sound of it stirred the hair at the base of his neck. There was something about her, something sweet and familiar. He wanted to turn around and take a good look at her, but he had to save her life first.

  “What the hell are you doing?” she shouted.

  Distracted by the vehemence in her tone, he took his eyes off the werewolf for a split-second, and that was all it took.

  The werewolf lunged. It knocked him to the ground, landing on top of him, teeth bared. It snarled and went for his throat. Saliva dripped from the snapping jaws. Disgusting. Jack tried to focus on what he was doing and push aside how much he loathed touching the nasty thing.

  He grabbed its head with both hands and struggled to keep the sharp teeth at a distance. It was hard to get a good grip because of the thick fur and the animal’s violent movements. The beast tried to turn its head, catch his arm, but he squeezed it tighter.

  Then the werewolf changed tactics.

  It swiped hard at his chest. Razor-sharp claws sliced open his shirt and the flesh beneath. The pain distracted him. His fingers cramped, almost letting go. Blood soaked the front of his shirt. With the cold ground beneath him and the sudden loss of blood, his mind began to drift. A werewolf had killed him for the second time. He only hoped the girl had gotten away.

  As if in answer to his silent question two graceful hands reached over his head and settled upon his. He opened his mouth, tried to tell her to run, but he couldn’t speak. A single slurred word left his parted lips. It was unintelligible even to him.

  The wolf looked at her, and it stopped in mid-attack. The hairy beast slowly backed off him, growling as it retreated. Was it afraid of the girl?