Read Undead and Unappreciated Online
Authors: MaryJanice Davidson
I
took another slurp of my tea (orange pekoe, six sugars) and stuck out my left foot. Yep, last season's Brunos still looked great. Hell, they could be from the last decade and still look great. Quality costsâ¦and it lasts, too.
Marc Spangler, one of my roommates, slouched into the kitchen, yawning. I withdrew my leg before he tripped and brained himself on the microwave. He looked like pan-fried hell, which was to say, he looked like he just came off shift. Since moving in with an emergency ward physician, I've discovered that your average doc comes off shift grimier than your average garbageman.
I greeted him warmly. “Another hard afternoon saving lives and seducing the janitor?”
“Another hard night suckering poor slobs out of their precious lifeblood?”
“Yep,” we both said.
He poured himself a glass of milk and sat down across from me. “You look like you need some toast,” I prompted.
“Forget it. I'm not eating food so you can get off on it secondhand. âOoh, ooh, Marc, make sure you smear the butter allllll over the breadâ¦now let me smell itâ¦don't you want some sweet, sweet jelly with that?' I've gained seven pounds since I moved in, you cow.”
“You should have more respect for the dead,” I said solemnly, and we both cracked up.
“God, what a day,” he said. His hair was growing in nicely (he'd gone through a head-shaving phase this past summer), so now he looked like a clean Brillo pad with friendly green eyes. I wished my eyes were like that, but mine were murky, like fridge mold. His were clear, like lagoon water.
“Death? Bloodletting? Gang war?” Unlikely in Minnesota, but he looked pretty whipped.
“No, the fucking administration changed all the forms again.” He rubbed his eyebrows. “Every time they do it, there's a six-month learning curve. Then when we've figured out who has to sign what and in what order, they change them again. You know, in the name of efficiency.”
“That blows,” I said sympathetically.
“What about you, what'd you do? Chomp on any would-be rapists? Or was tonight one of the nights you didn't bother to get anything to eat?”
“The second one. Oh, and I crashed an AA meeting.”
He was halfway to the fridge for a milk refill and froze like I'd yelled “I see a Republican!” “You did what?”
“Crashed an AA meeting. Did you know they film those now?”
“They
what
?”
“I was kind of nervous because I didn't know if I'd have to, y'know, prove I was a drunk or if they'd take my word for it, or if I needed a note from a doctor or bartender or something, and it was kind of weird with the camera lights and allâ”
He was giving me the strangest look. Usually I got that look from Sinclair. “It doesn't work like that.”
“Yeah, I know, I found out. Really nice bunch of people. Kind of jumpy, but very friendly. Had to dodge the reporter, though.”
“Reporterâ” He shook his head. “But Betsyâ¦why did you go?”
“Isn't it obvious?” I asked, a little irritably. Marc was usually sharper than this. “I drink blood.”
“And did it work?” he asked with exaggerated concern.
“No, dimwad, it did not. The reporter and the lights freaked me out, so I left early. But I might go back.” I took another gulp of tea. Needed more sugar. I dumped some in and added, “Yep, I just might. Maybe they don't teach you the trick until you've gone a few times.”
“It's not a secret handshake, honey.” He laughed, but not like he thought what I'd said was funny. “But you could try that, see how that works.”
“What's your damage? Maybe
you
should have a drink,” I joked.
“I'm a recovering alcoholic.”
“Oh, you are not.”
“Betsy. I am.”
“Nuh-uh!”
“Uh-huh.”
I fought down escalating panic. Sure, I hadn't known Marc as long as I'd known, say, Jessica, but still. You'd think he would have brought something like that up. Orâugh!âmaybe he had, and I'd been so obsessed with the events of the past six months I hadn'tâ
“Don't worry,” he said, reading my aghast expression and interpreting it correctly. “I never told you before.”
“Well, Iâ¦I guess I should have noticed.” I could put away a case of plum wine a month, and Jessica liked her daiquiris, and Sinclair went through grasshoppers like there was gonna be a crème de menthe embargo (for a studly vampire king, he drank like a girl), but I'd never noticed how Marc always stuck to milk. Or juice. Or water.
Of course, I'd had other things on my mind. Especially lately. But I was still embarrassed. Some friend! Didn't even realize my own roommate had a drinking problem. “I guess I should have noticed,” I said again. “I'm sorry.”
“I guess I should have told you. But there didn't ever seem to be a good time to bring it up. I mean, first there was the whole thing with Nostro, and then all the vampires getting killed, and then Sinclair moved in⦔
“Ugh, don't remind me. Butâ¦you're so young. How did you even know you
were
one, much less decided to stop drinking?”
“I'm not
that
young, Betsy. You're only four years older than me.”
I ignored that. “Is that why you were going to jump off the hospital roof when I met you?” I asked excitedly. “The booze had driven you to suicide?”
“No, paperwork and never getting laid had driven me to suicide. The booze just made me sleepy. In fact, that was the whole problem. Sleep.”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah. See, being a med student isn't so bad. The work isn't intellectually hard or anythingâ”
“Spoken like a math genius.”
“No, it's really not,” he insisted. “There's just a lot of stuff to memorize. And theyâhospitalsâcan't work a student to death. But they can work the interns and residents to death. And the thing is, when you're an intern, you're always short on sleep rations.”
I nodded. I'd faithfully watched every episode of
ER
until they killed off Mark Green and the show started severely sucking.
“So it was normal to go forty, fifty hours sometimes without sleep.”
“Yeah, but don't patients suffer because of it? I mean, tired people fuck up. Even someone who didn't go to Harvard Medical School knows that.”
Marc nodded. “Sure. And it's not news to administration, either, or the chief residents, or the nurses. But the fuckups are blamed because a babydocâthat's what the interns are calledâdid it, not because he did it because he hadn't slept in two nights.”
“Bogus.”
“Tell me. They're supposed to limit the amount of hours you work, but it's not enforced. After a while you get used to it. You can't really remember a time when you weren't dog-ass tired. It starts getting hard to sleep even on your nights off. You're so used to being awake, and even if you do fall asleep, you know a nurse is going to wake you up in five minutes to handle a code or an admit, so why bother going down in the first place, and you justâ¦stay awake. All the time.”
He went back to the fridge, refilled his milk, took a sip, sat back down. “So, after a while I started having a few shots of Dewar's to help me get to sleep. A while after that, I started thinking on shift how great that shot of Dewar's would taste when I got home. A while after
that,
I started drinking whether I needed to get to sleep or not. And after that, I started to bring my old friend Dewar's to work.”
“You drankâ¦at work?”
And you drink blood,
I reminded myself.
Let's not start pointing fingers.
“Yup. And the funny thing was, I remember the exact day I figured out I had a problem. It wasn't all the empty bottles I was recycling every week. It wasn't even the nipping at work or showing up at the EW with a hangover almost every day.
“It was this day I was working in Boston when I was asked to work a double, and I realized by the time I got off, all the bars and liquor stores would be closed. And I only had half a bottle of Dewar's at home. So I started calling aroundâto a bunch of my friends to see if one of them would run out and pick up a couple of bottles for me.
“And none of them would do it. Understandable. When a pal calls you up practically in the middle of the night because he's desperate for his fix, you're not gonna help him, right? But the weird thing was, I was calling these people at eleven thirty at night, and none of them thought it was weird. That's when I knew.”
“So what happened?”
“Nothing dramatic. Nobody died or anything. Nobody who wouldn't have, even if I'd been Marcus Welby and stone-cold sober. I justâ¦stopped. Went homeâ”
“Dumped out the half bottle.”
“Nope, I saved it. It wasâ¦like a charm, I guess. As long as the half bottle was there, I could fool myself into thinking I'd have a drink later. That was my trick. âI won't have anything tonight, and tomorrow I'll reward myself with a big drink.' And of course, tomorrow I'd say the same thing. And I'm two years sober next month.”
“That's⦔ What? Weird? Cool? Fascinating? “That's really an interesting story.”
“Yeah, I can see the tears in your eyes. Which one did you go to?”
“What?”
“Which AA meeting?”
“Oh. Uhâ¦the one at the Thunderbird Motel. On 494?”
“You should go to the one at the Bloomington Libe. Better stuff to drink.”
“Thanks for the tip.”
He drained his milk, gave me a milk-mustache smile, and slouched off toward his bedroom.
I drank cup after cup of tea and thought about Dewar's.
E
ric Sinclair, king of the vampires, was back from Europe the next night, I was sorry to see. It had been a relatively uneventful six weeks despiteâor because ofâthe vampire king's voyage to Europe. I had been careful not to ask questions, because I didn't want him to misconstrue my interest in his activities as interest in him. On the top of my brain I figured he might be abroad to check on his holdingsâthey were on the vast side. On the bottom, I just didn't want to know.
“Welcome back,” I said to Tina, his sidekick and oldest friend. Really oldâ¦like, two hundred years or whatever. “Die,” I told him.
“I did that already,” he replied, folding the newspaper and setting it aside. “And I have no plans to do it again, not even for you, darling.”
“I'll see you later, Majesties.” Tina bowed and walked past us, out the room.
“Hi and 'bye,” I said. “Why can't you follow her example?”
“Miss me?”
“Not hardly.” This was sort of a lie. Eric Sinclair, at six foot huge, was an imposing presence. It wasn't just that he was big (broad shoulders, long legs) or great-looking (black eyes, dark brown hair, succulent mouth, big hands). He was charismaticâ¦almost mesmerizing. You looked at him, and you wondered what it would be like to feel his mouth on you in the dark. He was sin in a suit.
“Come and sit down,” Jessica said. “We're having a late supper. Really late.”
“Jess.” I sat. “How many times do I have to say this? You don't have to adjust your mealtimes just because the three of us sleep during the day.”
“It's no big deal,” she replied, which was a huge lie, since it was three o'clock in the morning, and she was finally having supper. Or a really early breakfast.
“You're so full of it.” I poured myself a cup from the ancient tea service that had come with the house. Like just about everything in the place, it was a zillion years old and worth about that many dollars. I was almost getting used to using antiques every day. At least my heart didn't stop if I dropped something.
“I missed you,” Sinclair said, as if I'd been having a conversation with him. “In fact, I was most anxious to return to your side.”
“Don't start,” I warned.
“No, start,” Jessica said, slicing her roast beef. The smell was driving me crazy. Oooh, beef! I barely knew ye. “It's been creepily quiet around here lately.”
“And I think it's time we addressed our currentâ¦difficulty.”
“It is?”
He meant the fact that we were king and queen together, technically husband and wife, though we'd only had sex twice in the last six months.
“You can't turn back the clock, Elizabeth. Even one such as you has to bow to logic.”
“Don't be a putz,” I told him. “Pass the cream.”
“I'm merely pointing out,” he said, ignoring my requestâboth of them, come to think of itâ“that you cannot be a little bit pregnant or go back to being a virgin. As we've already been intimate, and are married by vampire lawâ”
“Yawn,” I said.
“âit's pointless not to share a room, and a bed.”
“Forget it, pal.” I got up and got the fucking cream myself. “Do I have to recap?”
“No,” Sinclair said.
“But you will,” Jessica added, not looking up from buttering her green beans.
“I slept with you once, and got stuck with the queen gig. Slept with you again, and Jessica invited you to move in.”
“So, by that logic, I should give up intimate relations with Jessica,” Sinclair pointed out, “not you.”
“What kind of logic is that?” Jessica asked, almost laughing. “And you can just dream on, white boy.”
“All of you, shut up and die.”
“What'd
I
do?” she cried.
“You know what you did.” I gave her a good glare, but she knew me too well and wasn't impressed. I decided to change the subject before we got into a real fight. Everybody knew my views on the subject. They had to be as tired of hearing about it as I was of bitching about it. “Where's Tina off to?”
“Visiting friends.”
“I thought that's why you guys went to Europe.”
“It's one of the reasons.” Sinclair sipped his wine. “Marc is working, I assume?”
“You assume right. For once,” I added, just in case it went to his head. His pointy head.
He ignored that, like he ignored 90 percent of what came out of my mouth. “I brought you something.”
I was instantly distracted. And mad at myself for being distracted. And wildly curiousâ¦a present! From Europe! Gucci? Prada? Fendi?
“Oh, yeah?” I asked casually, but I nearly spilled hot tea all over myself, my hands started shaking so bad. Armani? Versace? “What'd you bring me, soap?” I tried to squash my soaring hopes. “It's soap, isn't it?”
He took a small, soap-sized black box out of his pocket and slid it over to me. I wasn't sure whether to be dismayed or excited. Small box = not shoes. But it could mean jewelry, which I liked as much as the next dead girl.
I flipped it openâ¦and almost laughed. Strung on a silver chainâno, wait, it was Sinclair, and he never did anything halfway, so it was probably platinumâwas a tiny platinum shoe, decorated with an emerald, a ruby, and a sapphire. The stones were so tiny they looked like a buckle on the shoe. It was just too adorable. And probably cost a fortune.
“Thanks, Sinclair, but I really couldn't.” I slapped the box closed. I had drawn a line in the sand a few months ago, and it was tough work, sometimes, staying on my side of the line.
If I let him give me presents, what next? Sleeping together? Ruling together? Rewarding him for being sneaky? Turning my back on my old life and forging through the next thousand years as the queen of the vampires? Lame. And again: lame.
“Keep it,” he said mildly enough, but was that a flash of disappointment in his eyes? Or was it wishful thinking on my part? And if it was, what was the matter with me? “You might change your mind.”
“If you ever come to your senses,” Jessica mumbled to her green beans.
The thick, awkward silence was broken when Marc walked into the dining room. “Great, I'm starving. Is there any more beef?”
“Tons,” I replied. “You're home early.”
“Deader than hell at work, so I got off early. By the way, you've got visitors.”
“Someone's here?” I put my hand on the necklace boxâ¦then took it away. What was I going to do with it? I didn't have pockets. Just hold it in my hand? Sinclair wouldn't take it back. Maybe leave it on the table? No, that'd be kind of bitchy. Right? Shit.
Why did he have to do this stuff? He must have known I wouldn't have accepted it. Right? Shit. “I didn't hear the doorbell.” Stick it down the back of my pants and smuggle it out of the room? Hide it in my bra?
“I caught them on the porch. It's Andrea and Daniel. They said they need to ask you something.”
I stood up, glad for a chance to get away from Awkward Dining 101. “Well, let's go see what they want.”
“Don't forget your necklace,” Jessica said brightly, and I almost groaned.