Confessions of a Vampire's Girlfriend (3 page)

BOOK: Confessions of a Vampire's Girlfriend
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“He's okay,” I said, really nonchalant. I didn't need Imogen telling everyone I had a crush on Soren. I didn't, in case you were wondering. Soren was fifteen (a year younger than me), had sandy hair and a face full of freckles, and was three inches shorter and probably fifty pounds lighter. He was, however, the only other person in the Faire who was close to my age, so we hung together.
“I think perhaps . . .” Imogen looked up and smiled brightly at three young women who approached her table. They asked her something in Hungarian, and after giving me an apologetic glance, she answered and waved them into the chairs on the opposite side of the table. Customers. I was a bit lonely and would have liked to stay and chat with Imogen, but one of the first things I'd learned when Mom dragged me here a month ago was that paying customers came first. I gave Imogen a little wave and went off to see what Soren was up to.
The GothFaire is usually set up in a basic U shape, with the big tent at the bottom of the U, and two long wings containing the individual tents, with all the “talent” along one side, and vendor tents along the other. The tents weren't camping tents; they were made of heavy canvas, painted in wild colors with even wilder designs, all of them open-fronted, some also having wooden panels for strength. Most could be quickly set up or torn down, and packed into long canvas bags. Soren mostly helped with the setting-up and tearing-down part, but he also did odd jobs, stuff his dad (Peter) was supposed to do, but never had time to get done.
I wandered down the line of tents, weaving in and out of the early Fairegoers, listening to, but not understanding, the different languages around me. The big lights lining the aisles had been turned on, since the sun had just gone down, casting eerie shadows in the little dips and hollows of the grassy field that held the Faire. Enticing, spicy scents came from the food-vendor tents, blending with the faint lingering smell of the sun-warmed earth beneath my sandals. I waved at Mom as she counseled someone with a spell. Davide, her cat, sat looking like a black meat loaf on her table, his front paws tucked under his chest, his white whiskers twitching as he watched me walk by. Davide doesn't really like me, but I put up with him mostly because I like cats, but also because Mom said he was very wise.
A cat. Wise. What
ever.
I found Soren down with a bunch of guys in matching denim jackets unloading amps and sound equipment from a battered old truck. The replacement band had arrived.
“Hey,” I said.
“Hey,” Soren said back. We're cool that way.
“What's the band called?” I asked as he struggled with an amp that was almost as tall as he was. I hefted one side of it onto my shoulder and helped him ease it off the truck and onto a dolly.
“Crying Orcs. They look great, don't they?”
We both looked at the guys clustered around a soundboard. I shrugged. “They look like all the other bands.” I'd die before I admitted it, but Goth wasn't really my style. I was a ballad girl. I liked Loreena McKennitt and Sarah McLachlan, women like them. Guys singing about wanting to slash someone's wrists and watch their blood drip away forever just left me kind of cold.
“I heard them last night. They're good. You'll like them.” I shrugged again. “Take this in for me, please. Give it to Stefan; he's the man with one ear.”
Soren dumped a heavy coil of cable in my arms. I grunted a little when he did. Darned thing weighed a ton. I carefully edged around the amps, stacks of sound equipment, and assorted crates, and stepped out into the alley between the truck and the tent.
Right into the path of a motorcycle.
CHAPTER TWO

N
arng.”
Darkness swirled through my head, but it wasn't the familiar darkness of the inside of my eyelids, or even the twice-experienced darkness of anesthesia, but a really black darkness that was filled with sorrow . . . and concern.
Are you injured? Does anything hurt?
“Gark,” I said. At least I think it was me. I felt my lips move and all, but I don't think I've ever said the word “gark” before in my life, so really, why would I be saying it now, to this sad blackness that talked directly into my head?
Gark. I'm not familiar with that word. Is it something new?
“Mmrfm.” Yep, that was me speaking, I recognized the “mmrfm.” I said that every morning when the clock radio went off. I'm a heavy sleeper. I hate being woken up.
You don't look injured. Did you strike your head?
The motorcycle! I had been run over. I was probably dead. Or dying. Or delirious.
You stepped directly in front of me. I had no time to avoid you. You really should learn to look before you walk out from behind trucks.
You shouldn't have been driving so freakin' fast
, I thought back to the voice that rubbed like the softest velvet against my brain, not in the least bit surprised or shocked or even weirded out that someone could talk to me without using words. I'd been with the GothFaire for a whole month. I've seen stranger things.
The voice smiled. I know that sounds stupid, because how can a voice smile, but it did. I felt the smile in my head just as clearly as I felt the hands running down my arms, obviously checking me over for injury.
Eeek!
Someone was touching me! The second my hands were touched . . .
My brain was flooded with images, like a slide show of strange, unconnected moments in time. There was a man in one of those long, ornately embroidered coats like Revolutionary guys wore. This guy was waving his arms around and looking really smug about something, but just as soon as I got a good look at him, he dissolved into mud and rain, and blood dripping from a dead guy in World War I clothes. He was sprawled backward in a ditch, his eyes open, unseeing as the rain ran down from his cheeks into his hair. It was night, and the air was full of the smell of sulfur and urine and other stuff that I didn't want to identify. That dissolved, too (thank goodness), this time into a lady with a huge, and I mean
huge
, like a yard-high, powdered white wig and a giganto-hipped dress with her boobs almost popping out of it. She was lifting up the bottom of her skirt, peeling it back slowly, exposing her leg as if it were something special (it wasn't), saying something in French about pleasure.
I jerked my hand back from the man touching it at the same time I opened my eyes. Vampire. Moravian. Nosferatu. Dark One. Call him what you want; this man was a bloodsucker.
His eyes met mine and I sucked in my breath.
He was also the cutest guy I had ever seen in my whole entire life. We're talking open-your-mouth-and-let-the-drool-flow-out cute. We're talking hottie. Major hottie. The hottest of all hotties. He wasn't just good-looking; he was fall-to-the-ground-dead gorgeous. He had brown-black hair pulled back into a ponytail, black eyes with lashes so long it made him look like he was wearing mascara, a fashionable amount of manly stubble, and he was young, or at least he looked young, maybe nineteen. Twenty at the most. Earrings in both ears. Black leather jacket. Black tee. Silver chain with an ornate Celtic cross hanging on his chest. Oh, yes, this was one drool-worthy guy bending over me, and just my luck, he was one of the undead.
“Some days I just can't win,” I said, pushing myself into a sitting position.
“Some days I don't even try,” he answered, his voice the same as the one that had brushed my mind. It was faintly foreign, not German, like Soren's and Peter's, but something else, maybe Slavic? I haven't been in Eastern Europe long enough to be able to tell accents very well, and since everyone in the Faire speaks English, I haven't really had to learn much. “You are unhurt.”
“Was that a question or a comment?” I asked, ignoring his hand as I got to my feet, brushing off my jeans and testing my legs for any possible compound fractures or dismemberment or anything like that.
“Both.” He stood up and flicked the dirt and grass off my back.
“Oh, lucky me, I got to be run over by a comedian,” I growled. “Hey! Hands to yourself, buster!”
His hand, in the act of brushing grass off my legs, paused. Both of his eyebrows went up. “My apology.”
I tugged down my T-shirt and gave him a look to let him know that he might be a vamp, but I was on to him. That was when it struck me that I had to look up to glare at him. Up. As in . . . up. “You're taller than me.”
“I'm glad to see that you aren't suffering any brain damage. What is your name?”
“Fran. Uh . . . Francesca. My dad's parents are Italian. I was named for my grandma. She's in Italy.” God, could I sound any more stupid? Babbling. I was positively babbling like an idiot, to a man who at some point in his life had a big-haired French Revolution babe baring her legs at him.
Oh, brilliant, Fran. Make him think you're a raving lunatic.
“That's a very pretty name. I like it.” He smiled when he said that last bit, showing very white teeth. Nonpointy teeth. As in no fangs. I wanted to ask him what happened to his fangs, but Soren and some of the band guys had just noticed us standing with the cable spilled all over, and the motorcycle lying on its side.
“Fran, are you all right?” Soren asked, jumping off the truck and limping toward me. One leg is shorter than the other, but he's really touchy about his limp, so we don't say anything about it.
The vamp glanced at Soren, then back at me. “Boyfriend?”
I snorted, then wished I hadn't. I mean, how uncool is snorting in front of a vamp? “Not! He's younger than me.”
“Is something wrong, Fran?” Soren said, limping up really quickly, giving the dark-haired guy a look like he was trying to take a favorite toy away. To tell you the truth, I was kind of touched by the squinty-eyed, suspicious look Soren was giving the guy.
“It's okay. I was just run over. The cable isn't hurt, though.”
“Run over?” Two of the band guys hurried around Soren and grabbed the cable, examining the ends of it.
“Joke, Soren. I'm not hurt. This is Imogen's brother.”
The dark-haired vamp gave me a curious look before holding out his hand to Soren. He didn't deny it, so I gathered my guess was right. It was no surprise, though. I mean, how many authentic Dark Ones were going to be hanging around the Faire on the very same evening Imogen was expecting her brother? “Benedikt Czerny.”
“Chairnee?” I asked.
“It's spelled C-Z-E-R-N-Y. It's Czech.”
“Oh. That's right. Imogen said she's from the CR. How come her last name is Sorik?”
“Females in my family take their mother's surname,” Benedikt said smoothly, then pulled his bike upright. He was talking about Moravians. I wondered if anyone else knew what he really was. Imogen said only Absinthe knew about her—I had discovered it by accident one night when we both reached for the same piece of berry cobbler and my hand brushed hers.
“I'm Soren Sauber. My father and aunt own the GothFaire.”
Soren had puffed himself up, his normally nice blue eyes all hard as he glared at Benedikt. I'd never seen him like that; usually he was all smiley and friendly, kind of like a giant blond puppy who wants to tag along.
“It is a pleasure to meet you,” Benedikt said politely. He turned to me and offered his hand.
I stuck mine behind my back. “Sorry. I have this thing about touching people. It's . . . uh . . . a skin problem.” A skin problem.
A skin problem!
Great, now he'd think I had leprosy or something.
His left eyebrow bobbled for a moment before it settled down. He looked back at Soren. “Is there somewhere I can park . . . ? Yes, I see. Thank you.” His black eyes flickered over to me. I sucked in my cheeks and tried to look like I wasn't the sort of leprosy-riddled babbling idiot who walks out in front of motorcycles. “I look forward to seeing you both again.”
“Wow,” I said as he walked his bike over to where a horse trailer was parked next to Peter and Soren's bus. “Is he, like, major cool, or what?”
“Major cool?” Soren looked after Benedikt. The guy had a really nice walk. I mean,
niiiiiiice
. Course, his skintight black jeans didn't hurt any. “I suppose so.”
I hugged my arms around my ribs, vaguely surprised that they didn't hurt despite my being slammed to the ground. Nothing on me hurt. To tell the truth, I felt kind of . . . tingly.
“You should stay away from him,” Soren said. I dug the latex gloves out of my pocket and put them on, then pulled the black lace gloves from my back pockets. I had bought them from one of the vendors because they looked suitably Goth. No one would look twice at someone wearing black lace gloves, but experience taught me that if you go around wearing latex doctor's gloves, people start to give you strange looks. Soren watched me put on the gloves without saying anything. I told him I had hypersensitive skin (not terribly far from the truth) the first day we met, and he's never said anything about my gloves since. I guess what with his limp, he figured it wasn't kosher to comment on my gloves.
BOOK: Confessions of a Vampire's Girlfriend
3.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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