vampire for hire 10.5 - vampire requiem

BOOK: vampire for hire 10.5 - vampire requiem
10.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Table of Contents

 

VAMPIRE REQUIEM

 

A

Samantha Moon

Story

 

by

 

J.R. RAIN

 

 

Acclaim for the Stories of J.R. Rain:

 

“Be prepared to lose sleep!”


James Rollins
, international bestselling author of
The Doomsday Key

 

“I love this!”


Piers Anthony
, bestselling author of
Xanth

 


Dark Horse
is the best book I’ve read in a long time!”


Gemma Halliday
, award-winning author of
Spying in High Heels

 


Moon Dance
is a must read. If you like Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum, bounty hunter, be prepared to love J.R. Rain’s Samantha Moon, vampire private investigator.”


Eve Paludan
, bestselling co-author of
Witchy Business

 

“Impossible to put down. J.R. Rain’s
Moon Dance
is a fabulous urban fantasy replete with multifarious and unusual characters, a perfectly synchronized plot, vibrant dialogue and sterling witticism all wrapped in a voice that is as beautiful as it is rich and vividly intense as it is relaxed.”


April Vine
, author of
Unbound

 

“Is it possible to redefine two genres in one book? I don’t know, but J.R. Rain has left a lasting impression for the vampire and mystery genres.”


P.J. Day
, author of
The Sunset Prophecy

 

 

Other Books by J.R. Rain

 

STANDALONE NOVELS

Winter Wind

Silent Echo

The Body Departed

The Grail Quest

Elvis Has
Not
Left the Building

The Lost Ark

The Accidental Superheroine

LavaBull

Jack and the Giants

Dolfin Tayle

Dragon Assassin

Lost Eden

Judas Silver

The Vampire Club

Cursed

 

VAMPIRE FOR HIRE SERIES

Moon Dance

Vampire Moon

American Vampire

Moon Child

Christmas Moon

Vampire Dawn

Vampire Games

Moon Island

Moon River

Vampire Sun

Moon Dragon

Moon Shadow

 

SAMANTHA MOON CASE FILES

Moon Bayou

Blood Moon

Moon Magic

 

JIM KNIGHTHORSE SERIES

Dark Horse

The Mummy Case

Hail Mary

Clean Slate

Night Run

 

THE WITCHES SERIES

The Witch and the Gentleman

The Witch and the Englishman

The Witch and the Huntsman

 

OPEN HEART SERIES

The Dead Detective

Deadbeat Dad

 

NICK CAINE SERIES

Temple of the Jaguar

Treasure of the Deep

Pyramid of the Gods

 

THE SPINOZA TRILOGY

The Vampire With the Dragon Tattoo

The Vampire Who Played Dead

The Vampire in the Iron Mask

 

THE ALADDIN TRILOGY

Aladdin Relighted

Aladdin Sins Bad

Aladdin and the Flying Dutchman

 

THE WALKING PLAGUE TRILOGY

Zombie Patrol

Zombie Rage

Zombie Mountain

 

THE SPIDER TRILOGY

Bad Blood

Spider Web

Spider Bite

 

THE PSI TRILOGY

Hear No Evil

See No Evil

Speak No Evil

Flight 12: A PSI Novella

 

THE GHOST FILES

Ghost College

 

THE VAMPIRE DIARIES

Bound By Blood

 

THE ABNORM CHRONICLES

Glimmer

 

SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS

Red Rain: Over 40 Bestselling Stories

Vampire for Hire: First 8 Stories

Blood Rain: 15 Dark Tales

Black Rain: 15 Dark Tales

 

SHORT STORY SINGLES

The Vampire on the Train

Vampire Requiem

Ghosts of Christmas Present

Easy Rider

Dark Side of the Moon

Blue Moon

Vampire Gold

Halloween Moon

Vampire Dreams

Vampire Blues

Vampire Nights

Teeth

Vampire Rain

The Santa Call

The Bleeder

 

YOUNG READERS

(Writing as J.K. Drew)

Little Wolf

The Secret of the Sphinx

The Emerald River

The Angel and the Gift

Forever Silent

Dare to Enter a Distant World

Dare to Rule a Distant World

Dare to Escape a Distant World

The Mystery of the Walking Statue

The Mystery of Stonehead Island

Deep Sea Danger

The Legend of Eagle Eye Mountain

Playoff Pressure

 

 

Vampire Requiem

Published by J.R. Rain

Copyright © 2015 by J.R. Rain

All rights reserved.

 

Ebook Edition, License Notes

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. All rights reserved.

 

 

Dedication

To Kathleen and Elaine...the two people who inspired Samantha Moon.

 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Vampire Requiem

 

Reading Sample

 

About the Author

 

 

Vampire Requiem

 

 

Requiem: a song, chant or poem for someone who died.

 

“If death is the great equalizer, then some of us are just more equal than others.”

—Diary of the Undead

 

 

She was the last person I ever thought I would be friends with.

Then again, when you’ve been through what we’ve been through together, well, maybe it’s not so surprising, after all.

But still...

We sat together on the back steps of my house, facing my expansive back yard and the Pep Boys sign that hung like a god over the far wall.

Friends
, of course, might be too strong a word. And
acquaintances
just didn’t feel right, either. She was certainly no acquaintance, that was for sure. Not after some of the shit we’d shared.

A comrade,
I thought.
A comrade-in-arms.

Yeah, I liked the sound of that.

“Sounds, I dunno, a little Russian,” Nancy said, picking up on my thoughts a little too quickly for my liking.

“Well, we’re going with it,” I said.

“Suit yourself,” she said, shrugging, nonplussed. “And, for the love of God, will you blink?”

Admittedly, I didn’t blink much when I was around her, since I knew it freaked her out. There was still some sass in me. Anyway, I could go for days without blinking. Generally, I had to remind myself to blink.

I now made a big show of blinking and she laughed and shook her head.

We were drinking wine and smoking cigarettes. One of us was buzzed and possibly laying the groundwork for lung cancer. The other would never get drunk or die of lung cancer, or die of anything other than silver to the heart. That someone, of course, just happened to be me. After a few minutes of silence, I asked, “How old are you?”

“Twenty-seven.”

“You were...” I did the math “...twenty-two when you met him?”

“Something like that.”

“You were old enough to know better,” I said.

She shrugged, some of her old defensiveness coming through. That she was a functioning human after what she had been through, was amazing. That she could acknowledge someone else’s feelings was a surprise. After all, my dead husband’s mistress had had a helluva childhood. I almost felt sorry for her.
Almost.

She exhaled a long, billowing plume of blue-gray smoke and turned to me. “How old were you when you married Danny?”

“Twenty-one.”

“Back when you were human?”

“I’m still human,” I said, and might have snapped at her a little. “I’m just, you know, weird.”

She laughed. “You are far more than weird.”

I shrugged and smoked and wondered again how, of all people, she and I had become friends. Through Danny, of course, a man we had both slept with, shared life experiences with, and might have even loved. Well, I knew
I
had loved him. I couldn’t vouch for her, although I
could
vouch for her if I scanned her thoughts. I didn’t scan her thoughts. Truth was, I never wanted to scan her thoughts again. Her thoughts were dark and twisted—full of memories that no one should ever have. Also, the last thing I wanted to see was an image of Danny in there, with her—and them going at it like feral rabbits.

“We never went at it like rabbits, Sam. Feral or otherwise.”

“How much did Danny tell you about me?” I asked. I often wondered just how much he had blabbed. And were there others out there who knew my secret?

Other strippers and prostitutes, no doubt.

“I’m sure there are, Sam,” she said, exhaling and looking away. Nancy never hid from what she did then and what she currently did now. Although I didn’t ask, I got the very strong feeling—and these days I always trusted my feelings—that she made her living as a very high-priced call girl.

“Something like that, Sam. I could tell you about it if you really want to know.”

“I don’t want to know. Not now, not ever.”

She shrugged and smoked and if my judgmental tone had affected her, she didn’t show it. These days, I tried not to judge her. I tried to welcome her as a friend.

“I do what I have to do, Sam. I’m glad you don’t judge me...too much. Anyway, he told me your whole story. How you were attacked. How you were turned. How you guys kept blood in the garage fridge. He told me more. Lots more. How you threatened him, scared him.”

Danny had blabbed my secret.

Months ago, when Nancy and I had first met, I could have denied it. I could have even changed her opinion of me. Controlling others was something that used to not sit well with me, but was now, admittedly, a feasible option. Of course, the demon bitch within me loved to control others. Loved it more than anything, if I had to guess. So, I rarely gave in to controlling others. And, yeah, that pissed her off to no end. Now,
that
I enjoyed.

“Are you taking his side?” I asked.

“Well, you did threaten him, Sam. He told me all about you throwing him down on the bed and choking—”

“He tried to have me killed! By other vampires. And he nearly got my sister killed, too.”

She shrugged. She usually shrugged. It was her defense mechanism. Her shrugs seemed to indicate:
I’ve seen worse.

I shielded my thoughts. I had to. They had turned dark. Far darker than I was willing to share.

“You’re taking that rat bastard’s side, aren’t you? And if you shrug again, I’m going to remove your shoulder and feed it to my neighbor’s dog.”

She shrugged again, and this one was defiant, snotty. It also came out with a surprising lack of concern for her own safety. She should have been very, very concerned for her own safety.

Very.

Maybe we weren’t comrades after all. Maybe it was impossible to put our past behind us and to forget the hurt, the jealousy, and the complete disruption of our lives.

And this, a defiant shrug, coming from the woman who’d slept with my husband, back when he and I were still trying to work things out, back when I still loved him, back when I needed him most.

I snapped.

Literally. I knew the bitch within me helped me to snap. Gave me just the right amount of hate to fuel what I did next...and what I did next would horrify me later.

But it didn’t horrify me now. Oh, no, what I did now felt just right.

So very, very right.

 

***

 

When I was done feeding from her neck, I was tempted to kill her. Tempted, of course, by the demon within me.

Other books

Legend of Mace by Daniel J. Williams
A Killer Like Me by Chuck Hustmyre
24 Veto Power by John Whitman
Two Short Novels by Mulk Raj Anand
The Jazz Palace by Mary Morris
Rules for Ghosting by A. J. Paquette
The Good Wife by Elizabeth Buchan
Masquerade by Rife, Eileen
The Nail and the Oracle by Theodore Sturgeon