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Authors: Donaya Haymond

Tags: #Fantasy

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BOOK: Bite Me
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****

When I walked into my first class the next morning, I could feel the stares boring into my back. It wasn’t very helpful for my goal to keep calm at all costs. Hyun Young, a friend of mine, was saving me a seat.

“People are saying that you beat Tammy up,” she whispered. “I didn’t think you’d do something like that.”
“Thanks for the confidence in me. I didn’t beat her up.”
“Oh good. What did you do, then?”
“Slapped her.”
Hyun Young was the prettiest of my friends, and certainly better looking than knobby, straggle-haired me. Unlike the BBQs, however, she seemed completely unconscious of her appearance. She shrugged. “That’s nothing at all here. She had it coming. Besides, I don’t see why one slap is such a big deal.”
“You’d be surprised.”
Tammy wasn’t at school that day. I felt a mixture of guilt and relief, assuaging the guilt by sliding an anonymous, typed Get Well card into her locker. Let her think it was from one of her groupies. To add authenticity I added some comments about what a nasty dork the freaky Dianne was, and how Tammy should stay away from her because she might be, like, all mean and stuff, and totally not worth, like, her, like, valuable time, or whatever.
The hours managed to pass without incident. The popular kids, of course, stayed at least five paces away at all times, but this was more of a gain than a loss. Some of my friends, whom I swore I’d seen just a moment ago, mysteriously vanished when I went up to talk to them. I hoped if I could keep from any other metamorphoses, the rumors about my first one would eventually fade away. Somehow this failed to comfort me.

****

That evening I was doing my homework while Dad worked on a short story on his laptop. Mom was taking a shower, which she likes to do at night instead of in the morning. Dad hoped to come out with a publishable novel sometime in the near future. Most of his work is historical fiction, though he’s thinking of beginning a theme of misunderstood vampires, “to create an environment of tolerance.” I thought it was a cute dream, though I never would’ve told him that.

Presently he turned off the computer, stood up and stretched. “Getting writer’s block,” he said. “I think I’ll go out for a fly.”

“Wish I could go with you,” I replied. The ability to transform, though limited to nighttime and to an animal that was rather puny, was the only part of his condition that Dad liked. It helped him get through the less pleasant parts.

Without answering, he changed—I had been used to it for years but it was still cool. His first smile in a while flashed across his face, microseconds before he was about eight times smaller than his usual form. The little mammal looked up at me from the carpet with beady eyes, looked up at the window, now entirely too far away, and squeaked.

“Hah! You can’t get off the floor. Should’ve thought of that.”

There was another squeak, but this time high enough in pitch to make my ears hurt. I obligingly bent down and picked my father up, cradling him in my hands. How many girls get to do that? I set the bat on the windowsill and opened it wide. He gave me a nod and flew out.

The werewolf of the house came down soon after that, drying her long black hair with a towel. “Where’s Dad?” she asked, sitting down on the chair across from mine.

“Practicing his echolocation skills.”

She was pleased. “I’m glad he’s gone out. Have you noticed him being a bit withdrawn recently? Listless?”
“Kinda. Maybe he’s depressed.”
“No, it’s not that. He just seems tired all the time. I’ve never seen him sick before, though.”
“Can vampires get sick? Besides from garlic and excessive sunlight, I mean.” Dad got sunstroke one summer, which effectively ruined our vacation.
“I’ve never heard of one that did.”
“Then it’s nothing,” I said cheerfully. “Could be midlife crisis. Although if you’re not getting any older, is it possible for your life to have a middle?”
“Perhaps,” Dad groaned.
We turned our heads, surprised. He had come back in through the window without us noticing, and was limp against the wall. Sweat plastered his hair into dark streaks on his forehead and temples. “I don’t. . . . know. . . why so tired. . . couldn’t go on. . . .” The words came in halting stops and starts. Even after a couple deep breaths, he couldn’t talk any more.
Mom went over and gently pulled him up. “Did you eat anything tonight?”
He shook his head, forced to lean against her to stay upright.
“Then why on earth are you trying to exercise?”
“I wasn’t hungry,” my father protested. Then he unwound her fingers from his arm. “I’m fine.”
All gentleness left her voice then. “Oh, so collapsing all over the place and losing your appetite is what you call fine? I heard you come in at six yesterday and at five this morning, and you slept in that little coffin of yours that you use when I’m gone instead of joining me. You can’t go on being like this without a word of explanation, Andy! I’m worried enough about Dianne. I don’t need to have to deal with you suffering too.”
Dad dropped onto the couch. “All right, Selene. I doubt there’s anything at all wrong except for a little lethargy–”
“A little?”
“. . . but I will ask Dr. Silver about it tomorrow if that would reassure you.”
“It would.”
“I called the clinic and asked around. He has proper credentials, and began working here ten years ago.”
“Say, Dad,” I mused, “how old do you think he could be? Wouldn’t it be cool if…? “
“This is not the time,” Mom said.
Can’t I say anything right anymore?
I wondered in despair.

Chapter Four
Examine Me

Shadows crossed the seat, the lights of downtown painting orange stripes in the blackness. My brain was doing it again: the boiling over of thoughts and feelings. It was a sort of amorphous blob that made me think in purple prose. I fiddled with the air conditioners on the dashboard, occasionally looking at my reflection in the window. My fingers traced the hair that went just below my ears, designed for low maintenance rather than beauty, the faint echo of a mouth floating in the glass. Nothing could seem less frightening or magical. Nothing gave even a hint of the wolf inside. Could there be something in the eyes? No. One hundred percent human girl was what I was, according to the mirror.

“I used to do that,” Dad said quietly.

I pulled away from the window. When Dad went out at night, he often wore blue contacts just in case anyone got a good look at him, but this time there would be no need. He didn’t appear to be looking at me. Usually he didn’t talk much when he drove. Then again, usually he didn’t look so worn out. I have heard that a certain level of tiredness actually makes people speak more, not less.

“Do what?” I asked.
“Stare at my reflection.”
“You mean lack of reflection.”
“No, this was when I was a teenager. Grandma used to think I was

obsessing over how I looked. I wasn’t, really. Just wondering who that face belonged to.”

Dad’s idea of a heart-to-heart tends to be cryptic. I appreciated it, though.
“People were scared of me at school. I could see it. Today was even worse than the day before, because Hyun Young had to go to the library to finish a project with her group. Taylor didn’t come to the bus, so maybe she finally had a nervous breakdown.”
“What about Jessie?”
“Jessie won’t stand within clawing distance.”
“Ah.”
“Tammy’s back and she is avoiding me in a plague-like fashion. Me as the plague, I mean, not her, as much as she may resemble one.” I paused. “And I’d rather have all that than something be wrong with you.”
He smiled. “And that is how it will stay. I was just a little off-color, and this is simply to comfort your mother.”
“That almost rhymed and scanned.”
“That should be the building,” Dad said, pulling into a parking lot facing a five-story, nondescript brick artifice. “Ready to delve into the mysteries of demonic physiology?”
“Ready as I’ll ever be.”
Three flights of stairs and two doors, and we were there. The waiting room looked like one belonging to any clean, respectable clinic. There were two couches, a pile of National Geographics, and a heap of stuffed animals and plastic trucks in the corner. A woman sat there at the desk, reading Cosmopolitan. Dad cleared his throat. She nearly jumped.
“I have an appointment with Dr. Silver at seven,” he said.
She scratched her head. “You’re seeing Dr. Shades?”
“Excuse me?”
“Sorry, that’s what we call him around here,” she said in a hurry. “He likes to wear sunglasses a lot, you see. Not that he isn’t good or anything, but he’s kinda. . . peculiar.”
“There are more peculiar people out there than you would ever know, Miss. Do you have us listed?”
She consulted a clipboard. “Are you Mr. Anghel?”
“Yes.”
“He’s still busy. Please wait for a few minutes.”
I was already sitting with my nose buried in an article about nomadic Nepalese honey-gatherers. From the corner of my eye, I could see the receptionist looking Dad up and down, eyes the size of dinner plates. A smirk tugged at my lip.
“Mr. Anghel,” she said, trying to sound sexy, “may I ask what your first name is?”
“Ferdinand.” He was scribbling in a notebook and paying a little under a third of his attention.
“That is so cool. Sounds all exotic and stuff. I’m Lia. Is that your little sister there? It’s so sweet of you to come with her.”
“Mmm.”
She seemed disappointed, and tried again. “Not many people come by here at night. You don’t look sick, though.”
“It’s just a checkup.”
I remained silent, feeling gleefully evil.
“I haven’t seen you around. . . are you free today?” The blonde beast was persistent; I had to give her that.
No answer. Looking over Dad’s shoulder I could see he had gotten a new idea and was miles from everything but the words on the paper.
“Do you go to college here? I’m a junior. This is my first office job.”
Something from the workaday world pulled Dad out of his creative trance. He hadn’t heard a single thing she said, and was completely unaware of the pitiful attempts at flirting. “Oh, Miss, I forgot to mention that my daughter has an appointment as well. I’m getting incredibly absentminded lately.”
Studiously, I kept a straight face. “It’s okay, Dad,” I said, sweet as saccharine. “Happens when you’re forty.”
Now the woman had a look that just barely stopped short of homicidal. “You should be able to see the doctor now. Number thirteen, on the left.”
“Is there something wrong with her?” Dad asked me as we walked down the corridor.
“Would you believe me if I said she was hitting on you?”
“Don’t be silly.”
Door number thirteen opened into a dim room, and a man who looked to be in his early thirties poked out his head. I could see why the receptionist called him peculiar. To start with he had taken off his sunglasses, making the red irises visible. His hair was also red, though a more orange than crimson hue. Considering most redheads appear anemic anyway, the vampire version couldn’t go much further. The only obvious difference in complexion was that he didn’t have freckles. Compared with the average population, particularly our dear U. S. of Obesity, he was positively anorexic, but next to Dad, he appeared well fed. In all this wasn’t too unusual to me, since I saw a vampire every day. Call me a conservative, but I was struck more by his orange shirt and the carefully pointed spikes in his hair than by anything physical. Also, I had never seen anyone, vampire or no, with such an enthusiastic grin.
“Mr. Anghel? Ferdinand? I can call you Ferdinand, right? I’m so glad you came!”
“Hello, Dr. Silver.” Dad couldn’t help grinning too. It was infectious.
“I told you last time, I’m Nat and only Nat. Nathan if you insist. And is this the lovely young lady you spoke of?”
I looked around me. “Nope, don’t see her anywhere around here.”
Nat laughed. “Pleased to meet you, Dianne, though sorry for the difficulties that made you seek medical attention. Oh, please come in. Do you mind if I keep the lights down? It’s so much more comfortable that way, but for human eyes I’m not sure.”
“I’m used to it,” I said, following Dad in. He pulled up a chair and I perched on the table, dangling my legs. No lights were on in the room, just the windows open for the streetlamps to shine in. At first, I could make out only silhouettes. A moment later, I could see the glowing eyes of the two vampires, which was mildly disturbing. A minute more and I could see the orange shirt.
“Can I ask you something?” I began while he rummaged for a form.
“Sure. The name is Dianne, right?”
“Right. Are you really allowed to work in an outfit like that?”
Though I couldn’t see anything of my father but his eyes and profile, I could imagine his face. “Dianne Cassandra, this is not a time for smart remarks.”
“No, no, it’s fine. I had a nice white professional coat, but it was a bit too warm and dull.” He sat down on a wheeled chair and began filling out a form. “This is the slip for new patients,” he explained. “Shall I start you a file?”
“Yes please,” Dad said. “Do you know anything about werewolves, Nat?”
“I’ve seen movies, but other than what you told me I haven’t known any real ones. Sorry. But I can do the usual tests—height, weight, blood pressure, heart rate, reflexes, hearing, eyesight—and maybe we can do some experimentation on how the shape shifting works.” He put on his stethoscope.
“I’m happy to start there,” I replied.
“I could do a blood test too, but you’d have to fast for twenty-four hours first, and I’m not sure it would do us much good besides getting both your father and me salivating. Aw c’mon, Ferdinand, don’t look at me like that. You have to admit you would.”
With a combination of ordinary professionalism and bright chatter, Nat did all the tests that constitute a thorough check-up. Disappointingly, everything was completely normal. An hour or so later, he stopped.
“I’m sorry darlin’. I’m not seeing anything here.”
“Hmm.” I mumbled. “I wish I could figure out how I do the stupid shape-shifting. Mom says when she does it voluntarily on twenty-nine nights out of the month, she just kind of thinks it. Thinks wolfy thoughts. I tried that. I watched some documentaries. I even read
The Call of the Wild
and brutally ripped apart my dinner before eating it.”
“So that’s what you were doing,” Dad mused.
“And I asked Dad about how he does it, and he says it’s a muscular thing. It’s like how he lifts one eyebrow, because he has control of a muscle there that most people aren’t aware of.”
Nat nodded. “It’s kind of a clenching feeling, except you do it all over.” He demonstrated by turning into an orange-brown bat, which somehow had a miniaturized stethoscope around its neck. When he changed back, Dad and I were still laughing.
Eventually I became serious again. “The only two times it worked was because of extreme emotions. The first time I was really, really mad, and the second I was frustrated and confused. They were only partial changes too. I guess there would have to be a major catastrophe for me to completely transform.”
“Don’t worry about not being able to do it here. On the bright side, you are otherwise completely healthy and quite fit.”
“I do track and field.”
“That would explain it. It’s good to have normal checkups too, you know. You can come back anytime. This is a lot more fun than the influenza people I saw all day.” The vampire doctor swiveled his chair around. “Now, Ferdinand, I believe it is your turn.”
Dad and I switched places, though when he was on the table he lounged back more than I had. “There’s nothing really wrong with me,” he said. “I’ve just been rather lethargic lately and Selene was worried.” “So am I,” I interjected.
Our rather unorthodox doctor listed while Dad related what had happened the previous night with his attempt to fly. “That’s all,” he finished.
“No,” I said, “it’s not all. He’s been going to bed early, and he prefers the coffin again now.”
“Hey! I like them myself,” his fellow vampire said.
“But are you married?” I asked.
“Dianne. . .” Dad found me exasperating.
“I see your point,” said Nat.
“And there’s the migraines and the inability to dent the countertop.”
Dad sounded strained. “Fine. So there have been several factors. I am still unconvinced that an immortal can catch anything serious.”
“Sorry to break it to you, but real vampires aren’t immortal.”
“Really?” He sat up. “That’s great! I was worrying about outliving Selene and Dianne and Dianne’s great-grandchildren and eventually having to stake myself out of loneliness.”
“Wow. Never met a guy with a death wish like yours. But I don’t have a family, so maybe I can’t relate. You probably will outlive them anyway. Vampire lifespan seems to be a couple centuries, depending on the circumstances.”
“No offense,” I said, “but I always thought you guys were undead.”
“Have you seen
The Princess Bride
?”
Dad gave him a look. “Are you saying we’re mostly dead?”
“How did you know the quote? Somebody watches a chick flick more than he’d like to admit.”
“I have a teenage daughter. Now explain how semi-life works, please.”
Nat’s voice slid into lecture mode. “The misconceptions that vampires don’t breathe, have no pulse or circulation, and can survive in a weakened state without sustenance—all these stem from an extremely slow metabolism. I mean, if you were really dead, where did
she
come from? It’s really, really slow. You miss the pulse if you’re not patient enough. It’s quiet too. Sometimes just a thin layer of clothing can muffle it. Allow me to demonstrate.”
He walked over to me and put the stethoscope on my chest, handing the earphones to me. “Nice, normal pace,” he continued. “Lub-dup, lubdup, lub-dup. Care for a listen?”
“No thanks. Not that I’m not pleased with Dianne’s possession of a normal pulse, of course.”
“Dianne, sweetheart, come here for a sec. Ferdin, could you take your shirt off?”
“What?”
“For the pulse.”
“You didn’t make Dianne take hers off.”
“I didn’t think it would go over too well with you, considering I look a third of my age and you might think I had ulterior motives. It’s fine to do that when you’re just a doctor, but I’m looking for family friend status here. Besides, I told you. . .”
I couldn’t keep myself from interrupting. “You’re ninety?”
“Ninety-nine. I don’t like having these secrets any more than your family does, but you must admit that looking like this when you’re planning your centennial is pretty sweet.”
“There’s always compensations,” Dad said. “Does that mean I have to respect you now, because you’re nearly sixty years older than me?”
“Don’t worry about it.”
With Nat’s guidance, I tried to listen to Dad’s heartbeat. Nothing could be heard. There was not a sound at from the chest or at the wrist. Dad tried himself to no avail.
“All right, you win.” I wondered how the receptionist would have felt about this, though I didn’t think there was anything to drool over. Vampire chests are only appealing if you don’t mind seeing lots of ribs. Especially only if said vampire is not your father.
Finally Nat managed to locate a beat. The rhythm was an achingly slow and soft dup. . . dup. . . dup. I had to strain my ears for each feeble thump (the ears stayed human this time), but it was there.
“I concede the point as proven.” Dad reached over for his shirt, but Nat stopped him.
“Just a moment. What are those scars?”
I couldn’t see them in that light, but apparently the vamps could. “Which ones?” Dad asked.
“All of them. The one at your stomach looks pretty purposeful, but some of the others are haphazard.”
My dad must have decided there was no point in evasiveness. “The haphazard ones are from the only time I bit a human. He deserved it, too, for beating me over the head and trying to hurt Selene. That was how Selene and I found out about each other’s powers, dealing with some muggers in the park.”
“Did you drink much of his blood?”
“Not enough to kill or turn him, but it was fairly substantial. Why?”
“Nothing. It’s just good to know when we’re talking about your physical condition. And the neat one?”
“Let’s just say that Selene’s ex was particularly vindictive.”
It was easier to take Nat seriously now that we knew he was much older than he appeared. “Okay, you can put it back on now. I’ve been beaten up a bit too over the years. Have you sucked down anything for a while?”
“Not for thirty hours. I wasn’t hungry and thought you might need me to be on an empty stomach. Uh, Di, don’t tell your mother, please.” He buttoned himself up as he spoke.
“That’s good,” said the doctor, turning back to the drawers full of tools. “I will need a blood sample from you. It’s possible that you might have gotten our equivalent of food poisoning. Vampire metabolism is so different from human that the most bacteria and viruses can do is general weakening. Even if you had cancer or something, that would just shorten your life to a lethargic two hundred years.”
That changed things a bit. “Cool,” I said. “I suddenly feel better.”
Now Nat was holding a syringe connected to a little bag. “This may be difficult.”
“Especially since I don’t bleed,” Dad commented dryly.
“In the past sixty years I’ve discovered that our blood coagulates extremely fast and flows slowly. You have to have a major stab wound for anything to come out. So sticking this in your arm won’t do the trick. We need a major artery. What do you prefer: just above the heart or right at the jugular?”
“Um. . . .”
“Neck then, if that’s okay with you. Don’t worry; vampire blood doesn’t interest me at all. Too processed.” Nat stood behind Dad, putting a right hand on Dad’s shoulder. I noticed for the first time that Nat was a lefty. Reflected light from the needle hit the white skin, and I could make out two tiny round marks from more than eighteen years ago. I shivered.

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