Hunted (30 page)

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Authors: T.M. Bledsoe

BOOK: Hunted
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“Well, but-but, at least for a few hours a day the people in town are safe, right?  You said he has to rest, so if he’s resting then he’s not killing anyone,” she offered, wanting to find some good in this situation.

“Right.  He sleeps for a few hours, which means that he’s not out hunting.  And sometimes he doesn’t feed every day.”

Well, in a situation that seemed impossibly hopeless and dark, there was at least a tiny ray of light.  A very tiny ray, but a ray nonetheless.  Maybe for a few hours a day, she wouldn’t have to think about the people in Fells Pointe being killed and left in the park like so much garbage.

Kyle suddenly reached out and took hold of her hand, his large fingers closing over hers and giving them a gentle squeeze.  Lanie forced herself not to flinch at the cold feel of his flesh against hers.  She did not want to embarrass him or hurt him.  

“You really can’t spend all your time thinking about who he’ll go after or how many people he’ll kill,” Kyle told her.  “You aren’t responsible for this.  You can’t stop him.  He’s like a disease.  He strikes some people and he leaves some others to live.  The most we can hope for is that someday I finally get to wipe him out.”

Lanie felt a stab of sympathy for Kyle Vincent.  This handsome person was not only carrying the weight of this monster on his shoulders, but he was also carrying the weight of everybody this monster had killed.  It was a heavy burden.  And it showed in his sparkling green eyes.  That guilt, that darkness, that weight, was a dreadful thing to see. 

Lanie was looking at a person who hadn’t known a minute’s peace in a very long time.

“Do you want to come out with me for a while?” she asked him, knowing even as the words were coming out of her mouth that she was playing Russian Roulette.  If her dad heard that she was seen with a strange man…she’d be dead long before Frederik could get to her.

“Come out where?” Kyle asked, suddenly suspicious. 

“I actually don’t know.  I just want to get out of the house for a while,” she answered, getting to her feet.  “Do you want to come?”

Kyle regarded her for a minute, unsure.

Lanie didn’t want to nag him, so she simply headed out of the kitchen.  “It’s alright if you don’t want to.  I’ll see you around,” she said.

It was only a second before Kyle appeared beside her.  “Where are you going?  You shouldn’t be running around town by yourself.  Just because I think Frederik might be resting doesn’t mean he is.”

“I’m not running around by myself,” she said.  “You’ll be with me.”  And wasn’t that safest thing for her?

“I really should be out trying to find him.  I’ve wasted a lot of time already today,” Kyle said as they made for the entryway.

Lanie shrugged.  “Alright.  I’ll see you later, then,” she said, taking her sweater and purse from the coat tree.

“Wait.  You’re really going out on your own?” Kyle questioned, right on her heels as she headed for the door.

“I am,” she said, opening the front door, but then pausing to stick her head out and glance up and down the street, making sure that no one was in sight. 

She moved to step outside, but Kyle quickly put himself in front of her, stepping out onto the porch first and pausing for a moment before taking Lanie’s hand in his and pulling her over the threshold.  She pulled the door closed, deciding to leave it unlocked.  Now that she knew what was happening, she didn’t see a need to bother with dead bolts and keys.  And actually not having to lock the door made things seem almost…normal.  Almost. 

“Where are you going?” Kyle asked as he led her off the porch and over to her Bug.

“I dunno,” she answered easily.  “I’ll probably just wing it.”

“Well, you don’t have to drive,” he told her. “I can get you where you want to go faster than your car can.”

She thought about that and found the thought rather intriguing.  However, she also figured that the handsome Kyle Vincent just might benefit from a little dose of…normal.  “I think I’d rather drive.  Are you coming?”

Kyle opened her door for her, shut it and then rounded the car and climbed in.  As he belted into his seat, Lanie had to note just how large and uncomfortable he looked sitting in her small car.  It was…kind of cute.

“So, where are you going?” Kyle asked again, clearly needing this information from her.

“I thought I’d start with a coffee and just go from there,” she said, starting the car and backing out of the driveway.  “I have to be at school by three, though.”

“Shouldn’t you be at school now?” he asked, sounding rather parental.

“I should,” she said and left it at that.

Kyle didn’t say anything else as Lanie maneuvered through the streets and into town toward Katy’s Korner.  Once there, they parked down the street and as they walked back toward the building, Kyle kept his hand firmly on her back.  Lanie couldn’t help but notice how uncomfortable Kyle was looking as they passed people on the sidewalk, people who were shooting him some rather questionable glances.  Perhaps because of his appearance, or perhaps because, despite his appearance, Sam Bancroft’s daughter was walking with him.

“Maybe I shouldn’t be walking around.  The Sheriff is still looking for me, isn’t he?” Kyle asked, pulling the door of the restaurant open for her. 

“Yes,” Lanie told him.  “But, I don’t think anyone around here knows that.  You’ll be fine.”

Kyle looked dubious, but followed her into the diner anyway.  At the counter, Lanie ordered them both iced lattes and then, not liking the fact that the customers all had eyes on her, the Sheriff’s daughter, who was hanging out with an unknown man, she decided maybe they should abandon the diner and find someplace a little less crowded before one of the concerned citizens placed a call to her father. 

She paid for the tab, shooed away Kyle’s protests, and then led the way out of the diner and back to the car.  Once they were belted in, she decided to point them out toward the edges of Fells Pointe, where it wasn’t likely there would be too many prying eyes wondering why Sam Bancroft’s kid wasn’t in school and was, in fact, keeping company with a
very
strange looking man.

The outskirts of Fells Pointe, at least on Lanie’s end of town, were made up of a few scattered businesses and stands of woodland.  Lanie rarely spent time out that way, except to go to the Drive-In, because there really wasn’t much of a reason.  She had no need for a used book store or a used tire center.  However, there
was
a quiet little street that held a small park that no one really used because it was next to a rundown bar called Stoney’s. 

Most of the people in town tried to avoid having anything to do with this side of Fells Pointe.  The good upstanding citizens didn’t frequent seedy bars with motorcycles parked outside.  They preferred The Pub, which was a more polished and refined establishment.   But, people driving up the interstate heading onto Princeton or Richmond didn’t share the same view, and Stoney’s was usually pretty busy.

Lanie actually had no problem with Stoney’s.  She’d been in there a few of times for a soda, they had a root beer float that was to die for, and the owner, Ralph Stoney, was a nice man who looked like Santa Clause.  Ralph and her dad had gone on a couple of fishing trips together over the years, so she was welcomed when most of the other under aged kids in town were not. 

The little park just down from the bar was pretty space filled with dappled sunlight and peppered with large trees and stone picnic tables.  It had been planted with a variety of flowering shrubs and rosebushes at some point, but since it wasn’t a popular spot, it had been left to its own devices, so the shrubs and roses were overgrown and taking over in some spots, which Lanie kind of liked.  There were even still a few rose bushes blooming from the summer, making for a very lovely scene.

Lanie parked in a spot on the street and she and Kyle exited the car, Kyle appearing at her door and opening it before she had the chance.  Kyle took her hand and led her across the sidewalk and into the little park, where the air was filled with birdsong and the sunlight was flecked on the ground and those late blooming roses were filling the air with their sweet perfume.

They made their way over to one of the stone picnic tables sitting near a massive oak tree.  The table was surrounded by a three sided wall of overgrown green things, making the spot seem rather intimate and cozy.  They sat down and quietly sipped their coffees, listening to the birds chirping and the wind rustling through the boughs of the old oak tree, all the while Kyle keeping his wary gaze darting about and his shoulders tensed.  He was prepared should trouble present itself and Lanie was glad.  With Kyle next to her, she didn’t have to worry.  She didn’t have to be afraid. 

Lanie suddenly found herself wanting to know about this handsome young man.  She knew about his life since Frederik had…left him this way, but she wanted to know what his life had been like before that.  And maybe talking about something ordinary would get that dark and heavy look out of his eyes.

“So, where are you from, Kyle Vincent?”

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

 

 

Lanie pulled up outside the high school and cut the engine, turning to Kyle.  It was nearly three o’clock and time to get to her committee meetings, though she couldn’t say she was looking forward to it.  She’d much rather stay with Kyle and keep talking to him, despite the fact they had just spent the entire day talking. 

She’d never spent so many hours talking to anyone, not even Johnna and Devyn.  But, talking to Kyle Vincent was easy.  He was very interested in hearing all about her life and seemed to have a voracious need to talk to her about his.  It was obvious that he hadn’t talked to anyone in a long time and he…needed to be heard.  Lanie had learned a lot about him during those hours.

The things he’d been doing since he’d lost his sister to Frederik were
amazing
.  She had wanted to hear about his life before Frederik, which he’d reluctantly told her about.  But, it seemed to hurt him reliving those days that he would never get back, so she’d left the past to bury itself and let him talk about whatever he wanted.

After he was sired and left on his own, he’d eventually stumbled across Father Cristos and had lived with him in New Mexico, learning all he could and fashioning the proper weapons.  Once he was capable, he’d lit out after Frederik and hadn’t stopped chasing him since. 

Kyle Vincent had been all over the world, he’d hunted Frederik across nearly every continent.  He’d killed newly-borns and he’d even killed some vampires that were centuries old, but he’d never been able to kill Frederik. He’d run into more vampires than could actually be found on a Hollywood movie set, some good, some bad.   The good ones, and there were apparently a lot of decent, morality driven vampires roaming around the world, had befriended Kyle and some had even helped him chase after Frederik while he was on their turf.  Evidently, most of the world’s vampire population was against littering the streets with bodies because it meant they might be discovered and outed.  Lanie didn’t know anything about the situation, but even she could see how that might be not be a good thing.

When he’d finally tired of talking to her about his life, which was fantastical to say the least, he’d wanted to hear all about hers.  That bit of the conversation had taken all of twelve minutes, but Kyle had been avidly interested, so she’d told him all there was to tell.  Hearing about her boring existence seemed to lessen some of the darkness in his eyes, as if listening to her drone on about her life in Fells Pointe was the dose of ordinary that he needed. 

She’d actually been sad when it was time to leave the little park, but she’d promised to meet her friends and she knew there would be trouble if she blew them off.

Letting out a sigh, Lanie opened her door and turned to Kyle, who was looking slightly uncomfortable.  “I’ll see you later, I guess,” she said, taking her purse from the center console and climbing out of the car.

She heard Kyle’s door slam shut and in a blink he was standing in front of her, his expression somber.  “I’ll be close by, Lanie,” Kyle told her seriously.  “Try not to worry about anything.”

Lanie nodded.  She would try.  She would fail, but she would try.

Kyle reached out to give her shoulder a little squeeze before turning around and taking off at a dead run.  And then he was gone, disappearing before she could blink.  Lanie shook her head.  She might never get used to that. 

Alone, Lanie headed across the partially empty parking lot and into the school building, making her way through the empty main hallway and toward the small conference room next to the office, her footsteps echoing hollowly as she walked.  It was an eerie sound that had her moving along with what was probably unnecessary speed, but she couldn’t help it.  Kyle might be out there somewhere watching out for Frederik, but that did not erase from her mind the memory of Frederik standing outside her door, his face contorted into an ugly mask and his red eyes gleaming with rage.  She would never again feel completely at ease.

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