The Tome of Bill (Book 6): Half A Prayer (9 page)

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Authors: Rick Gualtieri

Tags: #Urban Fantasy

BOOK: The Tome of Bill (Book 6): Half A Prayer
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Brock opened his mouth to laugh, but caught himself before it could escape. He might’ve been built like a moose, but I’d seen Sally take on bigger and badder foes. Ed wasn’t quite so discrete, and a quick huff of laughter escaped his throat. Normally, a glare from Sally would’ve silenced him. We’d all played that game, but before she could react, Brock was across the room and had slammed Ed against the far wall by way of his throat. Shit! Never underestimate a vampire to either puss out or look for an opportunity to suck up to a superior.

“Humans do not laugh at their betters,” he snarled.

I’m sure Ed would’ve had something to say had his windpipe not been in the process of being constricted. I scrambled to my feet, ready to peel Brock off of my friend, but Sally beat me to the punch...figuratively, at least.

“Drop him,” she said casually as she stood and dusted herself off.

“He dared to mock you,” Brock replied, flashing his fangs at Ed.

My roommate turned a sickly shade of purple as way of response.

“Then he is mine to punish. Not yours.”

“But this human...”

“Is a member of
my
coven,” she interrupted, making no move toward him. She could’ve torn him apart, but I began to understand that some challenges were best won with words. Psychological scars could run much deeper than physical ones, especially for a species that healed as fast as we did. “I have decreed it, and so has the First Coven. Are you trying to tell me you disagree?”

Brock hesitated for a moment, uncertainty on his face. Heh. Vamps were suckers for name dropping. Finally, he let go of my roommate, who doubled over and sucked in a great gasp of air, the color returning to his face.

“Now get the fuck upstairs,” she said in an even tone as she turned away dismissively. “And take the others with you.” She walked over to the far corner to a small weapons locker, where she put in the key, then punched in a code to unlock it. She began rooting around inside of it as if nothing out of the ordinary had just occurred.

Brock glared at Ed, but that was the extent of his bravery. Rather than risk pissing off Sally any further, he nodded toward the two vampires standing guard at the massive metal gate that led to the tunnel connecting the subbasement with the sewers. Together, they climbed up to the club’s storage room. A few moments later, the booming sound of the heavy trapdoor shutting rang out in the room.

Sally bent over the weapons locker for a moment longer, a distinct dirt stain showing on the ass of her jeans from when I’d knocked her down. Oh yeah, target sighted. When she stood up straight, she held three weapons in her hands. She walked over to Ed and handed him one. “Brock is going to give you shit again.”

“So you want me to plug him with this?” he asked, hefting the Glock. “I prefer my shotgun.”

“No, that’s for target practice. We’re doing that next.”

“Oh. So, what, you want me to tell you if he tries anything?”

“Yeah,” I added. “You could put him under that ninety-day protection thing, like James did for me.”

Sally rolled her eyes, then turned back to him. “Do I look like your mommy?”

Ed appeared to contemplate a response, but then reason took over and he kept his mouth shut. Sally was, after all, now armed.

“Don’t wait for it. I want you to start in with him first. Then, when he gets nice and pissed, let him bite you.”

“What?!” Ed and I cried in unison.

“You heard me. The others aren’t going to take your coven status seriously otherwise. They’re either gonna think you’re a thrall or my pet, regardless of what I say. I have little doubt that an example will need to be made. That being said, I’m not willing to leave such a sacrifice to chance. Brock is, to put it bluntly, both an asshole and a coward. He won’t be missed, and this way, he’ll be doing the others a service in his passing.”

“Damn, you are cold,” I commented.

She tossed one of the handguns to me. “You have no idea,” she said as she raised the one she still held and shot me in the kneecap.

* * *

The subbasement was pretty well insulated, so it made for both a perfect vampire sparring ring and makeshift firing range. Thus, it was no surprise at all that my screams didn’t attract any undue attention from the club. I’m sure some of the squatters still living in the tunnels close by heard it, but by now, they were probably so used to odd noises coming from the direction of Pandora’s Box that they took it in stride.

Thank goodness too. I so dislike bothering people when I’m experiencing the agony of a 9mm slug slamming into my leg. I’d hate to
inconvenience
anyone into doing anything silly, like racing to my side with a first-aid kit.

The pain finally abated a bit as my healing kicked in. The sight of the bullet being pushed out of my knee as the flesh and bone knitted itself back together almost distracted me from the agony. On the upside, at least it hadn’t been a silver bullet. If that were the case, I would’ve spent the next several hours crying for my mother like a little kid on his first foray to sleepover camp.

“Overreacting just a little bit?” I growled when I could finally trust my tongue again.

“Not at all,” Sally replied as she topped off the magazine on her handgun. “I was actually impressed by your counterattack. It tells me you’ve been paying attention.”

“Then why...”

“The bullet was for doing it in front of Brock. Did you see that fucker’s face?” She held up two fingers side by side. “He came
that close
to laughing at me. I don’t need that shit from the newbs.”

I glared at her, then eyed the gun she’d tossed my way me before the screaming had begun.

“Not recommended,” she chided. “Your fighting has gotten better, but you still shoot like shit. Speaking of which, get your ass up and let’s go. I don’t have all night. I want to be done before the next patrol gets back.”

* * *

Sally had her patrols down to a science, or so she claimed. Every day, at varying times, a group of five would head down into the sewers - two mages and three vampires. Their mission was simple: hunt down and eliminate any Jahabich, or however you pronounced it, that they found. The random timing was in case our foes started to grow wise to the strategy.

The Jahabich were nasty fuckers; shape-shifters whose true forms were that of granite-bodied monstrosities with glowing orange eyes and obsidian teeth that made vampire fangs seem very inadequate by comparison. According to Sally, they’d first appeared in the tunnels beneath the city when those freaky storms had started, following our fuckery up in the Woods of Mourning - the place where we’d accidentally started a supernatural war. Their attacks had originally seemed to coincide with the storms.

After decimating the population of homeless that lived beneath the streets of Vegas, they’d eventually grown ballsy enough to target the casinos themselves. Around that time, Sally had somehow come into mastery of Pandora Coven through means she never really fully explained to me. She’d somehow convinced the population of Magi that called Vegas home, mostly masquerading as stage magicians, to team up with her and begin fighting back.

Things now stood at a stalemate of sorts. The patrols had cleared most of the upper tunnels of the ugly dickheads. In fact, their presence seemed to be diminishing now that those supernatural storms were hitting with far less frequency. Sadly, the end of the storms, rather than signaling positive change, indicated that the two sides of the war were done flexing their muscles and were now ready for a good, old-fashioned, world-ending throw-down.

The only question now was: how much longer were we expected to sit here in exile of sorts? The power might be out, but we could still catch the occasional radio report to know how things were going. With towns disappearing left and right, swallowed by forest, I had to think the vampire nation would eventually want us to do something a bit more productive than sewer patrol.

* * *

“Sally has a point. You
do
still suck.”

“What? I hit the target almost a dozen times.”

“And missed it almost five dozen.”

“You shouldn’t talk,” Sally said to Ed as she cleaned her weapon. “You were right; you should stick to a shotgun.”

“Told ya.”

A noise from off in the sewer tunnel caught our ears. Well, mine and Sally’s anyway. “What time is it?” she asked.

I glanced down at my wristwatch - thank goodness I’d invested in a rugged sports model. “Almost ten.”

She nodded. “Kristofer’s team should be heading back about now.” She reached into her pocket and tossed her key ring to me, which I caught. “Want to go let them in?”

“Sure.” I walked down the ramp that led to the tunnels beyond. Normally, it would be manned almost twenty-four seven. All of the vamps under Sally’s banner got a turn at guard duty - well, all except for Sally herself. Bitch!

The only time guards weren't stationed at the post was typically when she and I trained. It would give us a chance to talk without the overly sensitive ears of other vamps listening in and hearing something that they shouldn’t. The side benefit of this was twofold: there were no eyewitnesses for me to embarrass myself in front of, and it gave Sally and me some alone time - something that I’d been increasingly enjoying despite her often violent disposition. Of course, now Ed had started joining us during these sessions. There’s always gotta be a third wheel.

Anyway, in the time I’d been here, the Jahabich had only made it to the tunnel once, and it had been short lived. A pair of the creatures was fried in their tracks before they’d gotten halfway through. Nowadays, the only ones who approached the gate were either returning patrols or the occasional homeless squatter.

That last part was a mindblower, I mused as I reached the gate and peered through it to the dark tunnel beyond. Thanks to Sally’s patrols, the homeless had returned to Vegas’s tunnel system, but they mostly stayed close. If there was an issue or any sightings of the rocky abominations, they knew to come tell us. In return, although she wouldn’t have admitted it had Alexander himself compelled her, she would occasionally give any food rations we could spare to them.

Go figure. Sally helping humans - the same Sally who ran a fake suicide hotline back in New York to lure unsuspecting victims. Now she had somehow become their guardian angel. For perhaps the thousandth time, I wondered what the hell had transpired during the months I’d spent as a prisoner in the vampire stronghold of Switzerland.

Oh well, there would be time to bug her about that -
again
- later. Hell, I had all of eternity to weasel it out of her.

I hunkered next to the gate, looking down the tunnel beyond for any sign of our returning patrol. It wasn’t an exact science, sadly. There was the possibility I’d be there for a while waiting, although hopefully not too long, as I kind of had to take a piss.

Sally and Ed wandered off to the far end of the room to talk, probably some pointless flirting on his part with a lot of eye-rolling and violent innuendo on hers. Talk about a pairing fated to end badly. They were a match made in Hell even before I’d gotten taken prisoner - or at least that’s how it was for Ed. He was like a little mouse being toyed with by a crazy blonde cat. Now things were different. Ed’s blood was a lethal cocktail to vamps. That didn’t bode well for a relationship with a woman who admittedly liked to get bitey.

There was also the immortality factor. Though nobody, Ed included, knew the extent of the changes that had been wrought upon him, there was nothing I’d seen so far to indicate his lifespan was any different than it had been before. In all likelihood, he’d be dust in a grave while Sally was shaking her ass at the dabo tables of
Deep Space Nine
.

Hah, that was a good one. Was it really any different than my situation with Sheila had been? Goddamn, we must’ve all had rocks in our heads. At least she had been smart enough to hook up with a human, someone she could potentially grow old with. Ed would be wise to do the same. As for Sally, well, the life of an immortal was bound to be a lonely one. I mean, sure, if we all somehow survived the end of the world, I’d be there to annoy her for the rest of...

The thought caught in my head. Us together for centuries, maybe longer? Whereas once the concept would’ve made me cringe, now I found it oddly comforting. I mean, I sure as shit wasn’t Harry Potter, and Sally definitely wasn’t Hermione Granger by any stretch of the imagination. Should the opportunity ever arise to bang her, you wouldn’t see me turning that down. Even so, I had never really considered the concept of...
us
.

I glanced back toward where she and my roommate continued to converse and was surprised to find some ugly emotions swimming in my head, ones I seemed to be experiencing with increasing frequency where their relationship was concerned. I finally recognized it for what it was...jealousy. I’d felt it before, but always assumed it had been little more than a case of him making inroads with a hot babe while I was still a single loser.

Nah, that was crazy talk. Sure, Sally was attractive beyond anything I aspired to ever date, but she was also a crazy dangerous bitch - a mass murderer. Even so, she was also one of the smartest people I knew, seemingly always several steps ahead of me. There was also the fact that she had a wicked sense of humor -
wicked
being the operative word.

I shook my head. What the fuck was I thinking? Ever since I’d first laid eyes on Sheila, I’d been in love with her. Nothing had changed in that regards...except that she was living with another guy, one she seemed to be pretty cozy with, while I’d spent the past few months learning to accept that and move on.

Wait...
move on?
Had I actually allowed myself the possibility of thinking there could be someone else in my life? I’d spent so much time pining for her that it didn’t seem I’d ever...

Argh! I so didn’t need this right now.

“Open the gate! They’re coming!”

The frantic cry from down the tunnel dragged me back to the here and now. Someone rounded the corner from the sewers beyond and raced toward my position. Two more soon joined him. Despite still needing my glasses to focus, my eyes cut through the darkness and recognized them as the group we’d sent out - or at least part of them. There were three vampires, but none of the mages who’d gone out with them.

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