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BOOK: The Eye of the Moon
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Her dinner guests all arrived together under the cover of night, and when Olivia Jane heard the doorbell chime she felt a huge surge of excitement race through her. Checking her appearance in the full-length mirror by the front door one last time, she readied herself for the evening ahead. She had spent over an hour curling her thick blonde hair into a style that she felt made her look like Marilyn Monroe. The look was completed with a figure-hugging strapless pink dress.
Not bad for forty something,
she thought to herself.

She opened the door, to be greeted by the sight of a tall man in a long white robe, wearing a gold ram’s-head mask, its horns curling around just above his ears. Twelve others stood behind. Six men all dressed identically to him, and six women in scarlet robes and plain white masks.

‘Greetings, Mrs Lansbury,’ said the tall man, sonorously.

‘Do come in.’ Olivia Jane smiled, gesturing for the visitors to step into the warmth of the entrance hall.

The thirteen guests filed in one at a time, each nodding to Olivia Jane as they passed her, and all marvelling at the sight
before them. There was one decorative touch which Olivia Jane insisted upon inside her house: all the walls, ceilings and carpets were bright red, the same scarlet as the robes of her female guest. A walk round the entire building would have confirmed what a magnificent yet creepy sight this was. The evening’s agenda didn’t actually allow time for a guided tour, however, and none of the guests was about to request one. Each and every one of them was eager for the night’s festivities to begin.

Olivia Jane led them through to the living room, a huge, imposing space with a ceiling fully thirty feet above the red-carpeted floor. It was filled with comfortable red furniture, and a pair of dining tables loaded with bottles of wine and dishes of rich foods. Within ten minutes, all of her visitors had removed their robes and were cavorting orgiastically, naked apart from their masks. Soft classical music played as they indulged in all manner of sexual activity, pausing occasionally only to eat and drink.

Their hostess need not have bothered spending so much time on her hair and selecting her outfit. The dress was ripped off her in a moment of frantic lust by one burly man as another tugged at her hair and pulled her maskless head down to his groin. The start of Olivia Jane’s initiation into their satanic cult was just beginning. A two-hour orgy would be followed by the evening’s main event just after midnight. Her acceptance into the cult was dependent on her offering up a young virgin for sacrifice during the witching hour.

Beth was due home at midnight.

Seven

Sanchez knew he shouldn’t have grabbed the mentally challenged boy and dragged him to the floor with him. Now the kid was hugging him tightly like a randy dog humping some poor bastard’s leg. He had both arms wrapped around the bartender’s neck and was gazing at him adoringly.

‘You saved me,’ Casper said, smiling inanely.

‘Yeah. Yeah, that’s right,’ said Sanchez. If the kid wanted to believe he had pulled him to the ground for his safety, then why shatter his illusions by telling him the truth? In reality, he had simply used the boy as a shield to keep away any swooping vampires. As it happened he need not have bothered, because the vampires were now all focused on attacking Elvis while avoiding his deadly aim. Two feelings washed over Sanchez. One was a sense of relief at having survived so far. The other, if he was honest, was one of acute embarrassment at being seen cuddling a young boy in church.

‘You’re my hero,’ beamed Casper.

‘Yeah yeah yeah. That’s enough, okay? Get the fuck off me, will ya? I don’t want nobody to see us like this. Fuckin’ embarrassin’.’

Casper seemed only further encouraged by Sanchez’s show of embarrassment and hugged him even harder. The two of them were lying between two rows of pews practically spooning, legs entwined, looking like a couple of young lovers.

‘I don’t want no more of this goddam shit,’ Sanchez snapped, prising the boy off him. ‘Go on, fuckin’ move!’

With a single strong shove he pushed the boy off him and
underneath the pew behind them. No sooner had he done so than a vampire swooped down on them from above, grabbed Sanchez by the neck with one hand and pulled him to his feet.

‘FUCK!

Pale-faced and red-eyed, the bloodsucker leaned in, his mouth wide open and his fangs arcing out, ready to tear into the sweet meat of Sanchez’s neck. Terrified, the young bartender closed his eyes, wincing. A sharp snapping sound followed, yet he felt no pain. No teeth in the neck either. Then, to his great relief, he felt the vampire relinquish his grip on him. He opened his eyes again and was amazed by what he saw. The vampire had the business end of a rawhide bullwhip wrapped around his neck and was being pulled, hissing in fury, backwards at a rapid pace towards the man holding the whip handle. No ordinary man, either. It was only the Reverend, fer Chrissakes! Now, Sanchez liked this new preacher. He’d been a breath of fresh air in town since he’d arrived, but no one would have expected to see him take on a vampire with nothing but a bullwhip.
That does it,
thought Sanchez.
I gotta stop pissin’ in the Reverend’s holy water.

Both Sanchez and the boy cowering beneath the pew watched in awe as the unshaven holy man pulled the struggling vampire right up close to him, the whip still wrapped tightly around the creature’s neck. When its face was close enough to feel the stubble on the preacher’s jaw something even more unlikely happened. The Reverend pulled a sawn-off shotgun from somewhere within his dark robes and thrust the muzzle into the tight skin beneath the bloodsucker’s chin.

BOOM!

Blood and brain matter and pieces of shattered skull sprayed high into the air. Then the remains of the vampire’s body exploded into flames and crumpled to the floor. Unfazed, the priest looked around for his next victim.

For the next two minutes the stunned members of the congregation watched as Elvis and the Reverend destroyed the remaining hooded vampires. All the while Elvis was still singing ‘Steamroller Blues’ and strumming away on his guitar,
which he would occasionally point the way of a vampire and fire off a dart or two. Sanchez, in particular, watched on in open-mouthed wonder.

Awesome.

Eventually the one-sided fight ended and a hush descended upon the shocked congregation. The graveyard stink had gone, to be replaced by a smell of scorching and a blue haze of gunsmoke. The Reverend set about checking that the members of his flock were all okay and that none of them had been bitten. When he got to Sanchez – to whom Casper was once more clinging – he looked the young bartender up and down.

‘I’m proud of you, Sanchez. That was a brave thing you did.’

Huh?’

‘I saw you drag the kid down to the floor with you, and then push him under the pews when the vampire went for him. Takes real guts to do that. You should be proud of yourself.’

Sanchez saw no need to tarnish the holy man’s view of him.

‘Aaah, it was nothin’, Reverend, anyone woulda done the same.’ He shrugged, hoping that the movement would shake off the clingy kid. It didn’t. The Reverend smiled at them.

‘No need to call me “Reverend”. My friends call me Rex,’ he said.

‘Reverend Rex? That’s a catchy name for a preacher, ain’t it?’ Sanchez remarked.

‘Well, truth is, I ain’t really a preacher. I just kill bad folks on God’s behalf, y’know?’

‘Oh. Yeah. Right.’

‘So, you two want a room out back or what?’

That was the cue for Sanchez to try to shake off the kid in the parka once again.

‘Sanchez saved me,’ Casper beamed at Rex.

‘Yep, he did. You owe him one, I reckon.’

Casper grinned at Sanchez, his new hero. Although the grin was a little freaky, and once again accompanied by a flash of lightning and a thunderclap from outside, it was also
faintly endearing. Coupled with the look of helplessness and enormous gratitude in the boy’s eyes it was actually starting to melt Sanchez’s heart a little. The poor kid was really quite sweet…
For a nutcase.

‘Awright, now. That’s enough,’ Sanchez snapped. ‘Shouldn’t you be home in bed?’

‘He’s got a point,’ said Rex, turning to address the crowd of bewildered churchgoers, many of whom were resurfacing from between the rows of pews. ‘Everyone. Listen up. I suggest you either head home now, or bed down here for the night. There’s a heck of a big storm goin’ on and it’s only gonna get worse.’

In spite of the bad weather, no one actually liked the idea of bedding down in the church after the horrific events they had just witnessed, so most of the congregation headed for the door at the end of the church. As they began filtering out of the building, whispering among themselves about what they had just seen, Elvis jumped down from the stage.

‘Thank y’all. Thankya very much,’ he called after the departing crowd. Then, after laying his guitar aside, he headed down the main aisle towards Sanchez, Rex and the kid, Casper.

‘Yo, Rex, guess I’m done here for tonight. You okay cleanin’ up on your own?’

‘Shit, man,’ groaned Rex. ‘You splittin’ on me already?’

‘I got some other fuckers to take down tonight, buddy,’ Elvis protested.

Rex shrugged and smiled at his killing partner. ‘Sure thing, man. Do what you gotta do.’

‘I’m kinda looking forward to this one,’ said the King. ‘I gotta go kill some boy band in town.’

This guy Elvis was cool and Sanchez couldn’t hide how impressed he was by the guy’s self-confidence and all-round swagger. ‘Wow,’ he gasped. ‘This band, are they vampires too?’

Elvis pulled a pair of his trademark sunglasses from his breast pocket and put them on.

‘Nope. They’re a just a boy band,’ he said, deadpan, his eyes now hidden.

‘Right. Yeah. O’ course,’ the barman stammered.

Elvis nodded at him, then began walking towards the door. Just then a young man burst in, fighting his way through the crowd. He was dressed as a scarecrow – if a rather wet and bedraggled one – and he was looking around the church as though frantically searching for someone or something.

‘Casper!’ he called out.

It was instantly evident that he was someone who meant a lot to Casper. Suddenly the kid who had been so enamoured of Sanchez forgot all about his saviour and ran down the aisle towards the scarecrow, overtaking Elvis as he went. Sanchez watched as the young boy jumped up at the young man, who caught him, nearly falling backwards with the force of the jump.

‘What the hell has happened here, Casper? People are going nuts outside. They’re saying that a bunch of vampires broke in here. Are you okay?’

‘Yeah, I’m okay, bruv.’

Casper was clinging tightly to his older brother, and now that he knew he was safe he began to sob as the enormity of the danger he had escaped began to sink in.

‘It’s okay, Casper. I’m here now. D’you wanna go home?’ There was no verbal response from the boy, just a tighter squeeze. ‘Come on, I’ll take you home. We’d better hurry, though, it’s startin’ to rain pretty heavily, and I haven’t got a coat.’

‘You can wear mine,’ said Casper, smiling and pulling down the hood of his parka, ready to offer it to his brother.

‘Don’t be dumb,’ JD said kindly, ruffling Casper’s hair. ‘You need your coat more than I do. I reckon Mom would probably kill me if I turned up wearing it and you were soaked through.’

Elvis caught up with the pair of them on his way down the aisle. Stopping, he looked the scarecrow up and down.

‘You know, you should be thankin’ those two guys
back there for savin’ your brother from the vampires,’ he remarked.

‘Yeah,’ said Casper. ‘Sanchez saved me.’

‘Sanchez, huh?’ said JD, eyeing the bartender, who was now deep in conversation with the Reverend. ‘I guess we owe him a favour.’

‘Yeah,’ said Elvis. ‘You should drop by his bar some time. The Tapioca. He needs the custom. Take a weapon with you, though. It’s kinda a rough place.’

‘Wh-? Well, yeah. Okay, man.’ JD was thoroughly bewildered.

Casper let go of his brother and pointed back at Rex. ‘You should meet the Reverend, he’s really cool,’ he said excitedly, tugging at his elder brother’s arm.

BOOK: The Eye of the Moon
13.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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