That afternoon, Kathrena seemed even more determined than I was to avoid a lengthy discussion about our school day. Falmer was reclined in his seat in the kitchen again, though this time his feet were up on the orange table. He squinted at me as Kathrena barged past and slipped up the stairs; I just shook my head at him.
“She’s acting weird,” he said, tossing an apple back and forth between his hands.
We had no need nor desire to eat, but Aradia liked to keep the kitchen stocked with fresh food. She did this for two reasons: the first was an act of caution, in case any humans stumbled across our thriving household and discovered there to be no food inside; the other was far simpler. We had a number of human guests – donors, as some of the Clan chose to call them – and we wanted them to be well fed.
I shrugged. “Is she?”
I don’t know why I felt such a sudden loyalty to Kathrena. Falmer and I had always been far closer than Kathrena and I, but there was something about her secret-keeping that endeared me to her. She seemed happy – possibly for the first time in the last four years, and for who knows how long before that.
Falmer grinned, his wicked-sharp fangs sliding down from beneath his upper lip. “Perhaps she’s enlisted with the Guild of the Soul Stealers. Now that,” he said, punctuating his words with a fervent toss of his apple, “would make for some interesting gossip around here.”
“I suppose so,” I said, but my heart was not in it. My mind was already walking up the stairs, rounding the corner and sitting at my desk.
“Are you okay, Ellis?” He asked with a frown. He pulled his feet down from the table, and the apple stilled in his hands.
I shrugged again. “Fine. Just – school is exhausting. Even more so the second time around.”
He grinned at that. “If only you’d been turned just a few years later,” he sighed, but his eyes were teasing.
He was right, I supposed. Being turned at seventeen meant that I was an eternal teenager. This was considered a gift within the Dark Vampires, but to those of us who wished to fit in with humanity, and followed the path of the light, being turned at a younger age meant an immortal life of youth.
The Dark Vampires saw this as a blessing, as they saw youth as a sign of innocence. They believed that it was easier to hunt if one had the visage of purity masking their true intentions.
For the Light Vampires, however, adulthood was preferable. The age difference was less stark, less apparent, less obvious in the later years of life. One could be turned in their thirties, for instance, and upon arrival in a new town they could claim that they were in their late twenties. Even with no signs of aging, they could stay in one place for a little over a decade without arousing any suspicion.
A seventeen year old, however, could not claim to be twenty-seven when they had so clearly not aged in all of that time. That meant more movement, and more disruption – neither of which the Light Vampires particularly enjoyed.
“If only,” I said, and I rolled my eyes. “Anyway, I’ve got a lot of homework to do, so –“
“So what?” Falmer asked, pulling his legs down from the table. “It’s not like you to care about homework, El. Especially not homework you’ve done before. Just think – in five years, ten, fifteen, twenty, you’ll still be doing the same homework. Live a little,” he grinned.
I shuddered at the thought. “Maybe Kathrena’s got the right idea,” I laughed. “Maybe I should think about signing up to the Soul Stealers, too.”
“Maybe,” he agreed, waggling his eyebrows.
The Guild of the Soul Stealers were a band of rogue vampires, joined by their rejection of Clan life and a desire to take what few other vampires dared to take in its entirety. They were cast further into the night than even the Dark Vampires, for they too fed without honour. When taken unwilling, the magick of blood, which carried the soul, was more powerful – but it cast that which took it into darkness.
The Soul Stealers did not just take blood from unwilling victims, however. Most Dark Vampires left their victims alive, so as not to arouse too much suspicion. One victim claiming to have been attacked by a vampire held far less weight than a number of blood-drained bodies found, discarded like an empty picnic basket once a child had had their fill of sandwiches and lemonade.
They utilised fear to flavour their food, as they themselves put it – according to Aradia, anyway. She’d spun the web of their story for me one evening, her spindly fingers drawing dreadful patterns in the air as she’d explained their… tendencies. The Soul Stealers believed that the more fear a victim felt before their death, the more magick their blood held as it was transfused from the body of the living to the body of the undead.
They were torturous and evil creatures – far more so than any other vampire. They lived under a ruse of chaos, but instilling such fear in the humans they so desperately sought after took cunning, forethought, and detailed planning.
They worshipped Haerlyne, who they believed was the God of Chaos, Theft, and Revenge. Aradia had told me of their great shrines, draped in ruby-red silk that flowed like blood from an open wound. They shrouded it with the bodies of their victims, giving them up in offering once their souls had been drawn from their bodies.
I’d shaken my head at her words as Aradia had spoken, and had bid her an early good night. I’d lain awake, however, long after the darkness had rolled into the sky. I’d imagined my parents’ bodies strewn across their gruesome altars, and I’d tried to cry.
Despite the likeness to humanity that being a Light Vampire afforded me, it seemed that the gifts of the path of the light were not endless. I’d been unable to shed so much as one tear, and that realisation had sent me further into my spiral. My duvet had torn between my newly strong fingernails, as I’d clenched my bed sheets and writhed beneath them in agony.
I sighed. I was unwilling to remember that night, and I had work to do. Not homework, though, as I’d told Falmer. I had research of my own to conduct.
I slipped up the stairs, following in Kathrena’s footsteps. I could hear her giggling from outside her bedroom door, and I stepped loudly around our hallway in the hopes that she’d realise she needed to lower the volume, lest she reveal her secret unintentionally.
I opened my door loudly, and let it slam behind me. I needed everyone to think that I was sulking about my day in my room. I let out a loud sigh for added dramatic effect, and then I slumped down in my desk chair and opened up my laptop.
I wasn’t really sure where to start. I knew that I wanted to look through the books in the library later, once everyone had filtered upstairs. I’d wait until after I’d fed – the humans were only staying with us for another day or two, and I wanted to make the most of being able to drink directly from the source.
If I waited until later, I would arouse far less suspicion. Falmer was right – it was unusual for me to be so eager to complete my homework. There were a good number of supernatural books downstairs, and I needed to find out all I could about werewolves.
I spun myself around on my chair as I waited for my laptop to load. To begin with, I’d not put much effort into decorating it. I’d not planned on staying with the Sunstone Clan for long, when Aradia and Ezrand had first taken me in. I’d been grateful, but fearful in equal parts. I was disgusted by my new body, my new urges.
I’d been a lot nicer as a human. I suppose I was spoilt by my parents, but not too much – enough to know that I was loved, but not enough that I started acting out. We’d always been close, and I attributed a lot of my popularity to them. I’d grown up with an abundance of self-confidence, and that had always attracted others to me.
Then I’d been turned into a vampire, and when I’d woken up my parents were gone.
My home screen had finally loaded, so I yanked my office chair to an abrupt halt. My background was a generic landscape photo of sun-drenched orange mountains, and it was not an image I’d chosen for myself. My desk itself was sparsely decorated. I had a few house plants that I’d picked out, wanting to bring the joy I felt in my little balcony garden into the bedroom itself.
Besides my plants, the room held little else of appeal to me. Aradia had offered to print and frame some photos of me with my family, but I’d declined. The memory of them was too painful, even now. If I needed to see them, or speak to them, I preferred to do so in private. I'd made a memorial of my own, out in the forest. It offered me more than any photo could.
I doubted that there would be much useful information online, but I decided that it was worth having a quick browse, anyway. My foot tapped against the carpeted floor as I scrolled through a myriad of useless search results, and then one caught my eye.
Vampires and Their Human Mates.
I opened the link into a new, untraceable tab. I doubted that Aradia had the time or inclination to monitor our search history, but I felt that it was best to err on the side of caution.
The memory of the golden-eyed boy sprung to mind, and for a moment I let my imagination wander freely. I’d never heard of a vampire’s nightmate being a human before, but I supposed it could work – if the vampire was strong enough to resist the urge to feed.
The website, however, proved to be as useless as the rest of the search results I’d trawled through. It was a documentation written by a human, which told of their love affair with a vampire. Although some of their facts lined up, most of it was nonsense. I sighed heavily, and closed the lid of my laptop.
I’d not realised how long I’d been scrolling for, but as I pushed myself back in my chair I noticed that the darkness was drawing in outside. Our eyesight was far better than that of a human, and as such I’d not needed to turn on a light.
I’d not noticed the lack of light, however. I felt myself snort, but I was detached from it. My canines were beginning to poke at my lower lip, and I stood sharply. I caught sight of myself in the mirror, and swallowed heavily; partly from disdain at my blazing eyes and extended fangs, but also partly from… hunger.
I turned away. It was time to feed.
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Kathrena was breathless when I reached my truck, as though she’d only arrived moments before I had. She smoothed down her sleek black bob, her dark eyes glittering even in the dim light. The rain clouds were thick and oppressive; they clustered, dark grey and bloated, at the top of the sky, dribbling down onto colourless stretch below. The trees, bright oranges and bottle greens, looked stark against the pale grey backdrop of the sky.“Hey,” she said softly, as I slammed the truck door. I dumped my bag onto her lap, and she frowned at me. “Everything okay?”“Fine,” I spat, throwing the gear stick into reverse.She stilled, and then, with a sigh, turned to face the blur of trees speeding past the window. She brushed her bob across the brown patch of her exposed skin, hiding her face from view.I could feel phantom tears burning in my eyes, my throa
“Your – your what?” I gasped, the hot flurry of my anger peeling back as his words permeated through my skull.His leg began to jiggle, but when he caught me looking he ground it to a halt. His hand came up to scratch at the back of his neck, and his gaze dropped. “My mate,” he said, his voice scarcely above a whisper. “That’s – that’s what I wanted to talk to you about earlier. I’m sorry I didn’t show up.”I swallowed hastily, my canines retracting back into my mouth. I hoped that he hadn’t noticed my lapse in judgement; then again, he had said I was his mate. Surely, then, that meant he was admitting being a creature of the night – or, at the very least, something not entirely human.“Why didn’t you come?” I asked, unimpressed by how pathetic my voice sounded. Moments ago, I’d leapt from a second story b
I could hear Skye calling out for me, but I kept my eyes fixed on the pines and conifers as I ran. Eventually, I could no longer hear his footsteps or his cries, and I stumbled through the trees, reaching out for their ridged trunks to pull myself to a halt.My nightmate couldn’t be a werewolf, could he? I shook my head, desperately trying to clear my blurred vision. I’d responded to him with tenderness, and closeness; I’d shown him the beginnings of an emotional bond that I’d not been able to trust anyone with, even my adopted family, since my death four years ago. And now, suddenly, I was able to show a stranger such faith, such… love? I shook my head again, and, feeling my dress swilling around my legs, and the crunch of dead leaves beneath my bare feet, I gave myself over to my most primal urges.I needed to feed. That had to be it. I was confused; my guard was down. But I’d wanted to kiss hi
“Falmer?” I asked, very quietly.He was stood against the house, leaning back against the bricks. With his dark hair and all-black outfit, he blurred into the velvet cloak of the night. As I stepped closer, however, his sharp, crow-like features were clearly recognisable.“Ellis,” he said coolly, by way of greeting. His eyes were narrowed, no more than two dark slits dug into his face. Then his gaze dropped, and his eyes widened. “Are you okay?” He asked, his voice softening.“Fine,” I said, though my thigh throbbed and the scratches down my arm ached. “I was thirsty,” I added, by way of an explanation. “I – there’s no more human blood. The donors left.” I knew I was rambling, as I often did when I needed to cover up something that wasn’t the entire truth. The more detail I could give, the more convincing I thought I was being.
The week following the defeat of the demon had been surprisingly normal. Well – as normal as a week could be for two vampires, a witch, and a werewolf.I leant back against Skye, pressing my body against his. His arms slipped around my waist, and I snuggled closer. I could see the darkness swelling outside, scattering the stars and drawing away the purple haze of dusk.Skye had all but moved in to the Clan house, and, whilst most of his belongings were stashed in the spare bedroom upstairs, he slept and spent all of his time in my room.I’d dragged another chair up the staircase and lugged it into my room, so that we could share my desk – though very little homework ever got done, what with our constant teasing and moments where, despite the desk and my laptop, despite the mounds of assignments and text books, nothing but Skye and I existed. Those moments ended in kisses, always, and though I was
The large, red-brown wolf in front of me panted, its claws digging into empty earth. I stepped closer, one quivering hand outstretched. The rain splattered onto its fur, slicking it down as it turned its huge, golden eyes to look at me.There was a nudging glee between our bond, as though we were both too scared to accept that we’d done it. We hadn’t failed. We’d won.I held the wolf’s gaze. He gave me a nod, and his jaw hung open in a lopsided grin.It was raining. I’d made it rain.I couldn’t make sense of everything that was happening. My grip on the knife loosened, and it clattered to the floor. Then Skye was shifting in front of me, and, rain soaked and bloody, we fell into each other’s arms. All around us people were waking up, witches and vampires alike, and I let out a breath I hadn’t realised I’d been holding. They were going to
“If you have the power to do that,” I said, yanking the blade out from under my skort, “why not just kill us all now?”Cythraul clucked his tongue. “And what would be the fun in that? The realm I’m from is nothing like your world, Ellis. This place has hope, and fear, and love, and loss. There is duality in all things. It is a privilege for me to be here, you see. I plan to enjoy it.”“So this is just a game to you?” I spat, raising the knife. I tried to keep my eyes on the demon, not wanting to see the lifeless bodies of my family all around us.“Of course,” he grinned. “Though I’m afraid your chances are perhaps bleaker than I’ve made out. Your little witch friend, the red head – she was wrong about that stone around your neck.” He nodded at it. “It doesn’t mean what she thinks. Her first guess was right &n
“You know?” I whispered. My mouth went dry, and I swallowed thickly, trying to wet my lips. Ice flooded my veins. We had lost. We had failed.He stepped out of the shadows, snakes of black mist pooling around his body as he moved. His smirk deepened, and I saw a flash of white teeth as he struggled to hold in his laughter.He looked, for the most part, human. His skin shone with a pearlescent lustre, but two dark horns protruded from his forehead and his eyes glowed red. He was tall – taller than any person I’d ever seen, be they vampire, human, witch, or wolf – and, as the fog parted, billowing away from his legs, I understood why.He had the upper body of a human, and the legs of a large goat. But, as I watched, they shifted and shimmered in the darkness, stars and sparkles of an indeterminable colour – too matte to shine like that, too black to be so bright; it was impossib
“I guess this is where I have to leave you,” I said, though I didn’t slide my hand out of Skye’s, or make any indication that I was planning on walking away from him. I was reluctant to leave him alone, even though I knew that his job was more likely to be safe than mine. That didn’t mean I wasn’t scared for him.“I guess so,” he echoed, though his clutch on my hand grew firmer.We’d agreed before that Skye should stay to protect the humans in the maze. With every second that we put off the inevitable, we were putting lives at risk. Our jaunt through the maze had been undertaken with the knowledge that we would likely be to first to arrive at the scene of any attacks – but there had been none, and, so far, it seemed as though the demon was planning on giving the maze a miss.The thought gripped me with fear, icy and unyielding, a frozen cage that constricted my
We had an hour to kill before the Clan were due to start their fight. I didn’t want to think that it might be my last, but try as I might, my barricades were struggling to stay in place. The two thuds played on a loop in my head, and I had to concentrate very hard to keep the images of David and Toby out of my mind.No. I couldn’t think like that. Tonight we would avenge David, and we would keep the rest of the town safe. We’d been lucky so far in that there had been only one casualty – there was something odd about that, I was sure, though I was grateful that was the case – but I didn’t want to put anyone else at risk.I took a deep breath. “Do you want to go through the maze?” I asked, turning to face Skye.He slipped his hand out of mine and rubbed it on the thigh of his jeans. “Sure.” He pulled a smile onto his lips, but it seemed that I wasn’t alone w
“Okay,” Molly said, clapping her hands together. “I think that’s everything.”“Finally,” Rowan muttered under her breath, and I had to stifle my laughter.It was the night of Halloween, and we were all milling around at the entrance to the maze. The committee had grown considerably since our meetings – we’d needed more volunteers to fill the maze, and there were parents, teenagers, friends and family stood beside us, all in costume. Molly had given out costuming guidelines before the event, much to the dismay of most of those participating, but even I had to admit that she’d done a good job with organising the maze and the activities within it.And, to my absolute delight, she’d made Skye come as a werewolf.“You’re just tall, and muscular, and you have all that hair,” she’d shrugged. “It makes perfect sen
Skye let out a tiny, defeated sigh, but then he pushed through his disappointment and stepped closer, peering into the window beside me. “Are you sure they haven’t just changed the display around?”“The display is the same.” I groaned, banging my head against his arm. We were being careful not to say what we were looking for out loud – there could be ears anywhere – but I’d been so pent up all day, so focused, and it felt as though our plan had fallen flat before we’d even had a chance to start.“Hey, don’t do that,” Skye murmured, prying my chin off his shoulder. “You almost went through a window yesterday.”I shrugged. “It’s pretty much healed now. But – thank you for being concerned. It’s sweet. I like that you forget what I am, sometimes.” I gave him a tiny smile, and he pressed a kiss to my forehead, rig
I’d thought that my classes had dragged today, but they had been nothing compared to the committee meeting that followed.Beneath the table, I linked my fingers with Skye’s. We were in the same dimly lit classroom as yesterday, and, though it was still light outside, the room was cast in shades of grey. Outside, most of the leaves had fallen from the trees, leaving behind gnarled and bony fingers stretching up into the white sky.“So,” Molly said, tapping her stubby index finger against the whiteboard, “we’ll put the tomb right in the centre of the maze, and then I’m guessing you two want to be the ones to jump out of the coffin?” She directed her gaze at Carys and June, who both nodded eagerly, before turning to grin at one another.“Awesome,” Carys said.“Where’s the centre going to be?” I asked, frowning. It looked close