Vampire Morsels: Elsa

This was supposed to be for Blogophilia (there are prompts from two different weeks sprinkled in here!) but I’m too late, again, so it’s just getting posted as is. No points for tardy Jo đŠ
Elsa
 (You can find Elsa in Shades of Gray. She is the one who turned Michael. This story takes place in the early 1980âs.)
Elsa stared at him and he stared back. A long moment dragged past and then he gave what amounted to an apologetic shrug and strode away in the rain. She watched him go; watched him climb into his black car and disappear into the night, and then she went inside and cried.
She hated him, but she hated herself even more.
When the tears stopped coming she wiped her face and went to the kitchen. In movies people always splashed water on their face, but what was the point? It was damp enough. Though, that would be a good excuse if her parents saw her.
âWhy is your face wet?â
âBecause I just washed it.â
Yeah, right.
She opened the refrigerator and stared inside. Her eyes skipped from item to item again and again, as if they might conjure something new and infinitely delicious, but they didnât. There were vegetables and fruit and cold iced tea. None of it would help settle a broken heart.
But what would?
She closed the door and dropped into a kitchen chair. The coffee pot light blinked in the darkness and the rain splattered noisily on the window. It was just the kind of night to be miserable, wasnât it? The kind of night that practically screamed for the company of the depressed and lonely. Even if it was their own fault. Which it was.
She knew he didnât want anything serious. She knew he had a life that was as different from hers as night was from day, not to mention a girlfriend heâd never leave. Still, sheâd hoped anyway, hadnât she? Deep down sheâd believed that heâd stay. That was why she was so shocked when he said goodbye.
âBye, babes. Itâs been fun.â
What fantastic parting words. Those were the kind of words you could frame and hang on a wall. As if. Couldnât he come up with something better? He had enough practice that he should have a little speech memorized just for the occasion. Did he say that to all the girls, or was she just the one lucky enough for such a poetic verse. Didnât immortality require something better from him?
Damn him.
She ran her fingers through her brown hair and took a deep, cleansing breath. She wished she could wash him away, the way sheâd washed the blood from her skin after their first night. Heâd shown her what he was and sheâd accepted it; welcomed it. He was beautiful and charismatic, and when she looked in his eyes the world jumped.
And now he was gone.
She abandoned the kitchen and her silent coffee pot companion. The front room was awash in whispery shadows. She stopped by the tv and turned it on, but there was only static. It was too late for programming. It was as if the station managers were all saying in unison âGo to bed!â
She threw herself on the couch and absently picked up the phone from the stand. She stared at it. Nothing happened. With a sigh she snatched up the receiver and tapped in Jenniferâs number. She was her best friend and this was the kind of situation best friends were supposed to be for.
Elsa counted off the rings. One. Two. Three. Four. They rang on and on, until she ticked off number eighteen. That was when the line clicked and a sleepy voice muttered, âHello?â
Elsa gripped the phone in a strangulation hold and tried to find words. âJen-â A thick sob cut her off and she broke down. âTristan. He- heâs gone!â she wailed.
âWhat? Whoâs gone?â Jen yawned and slowly came to terms with the conversation. âElsa, is that you?â
âHeâs gone!â she sobbed again. âHe just left! God dammit, he just left!â
âOh, that dude who thought he was a vampire?â Jen was suddenly awake and her voice dripped sarcasm instead of sympathy. âLook, he was hot â maybe not bringing back sexy hot, but still hot, I admit that. But, Elsa, he thought he was a vampire.â
âHe was!â she cried. âGoddamit! He was! And he left!â
âYeah, I get that he left. But youâre better off without the psycho. What would your parents say?â
Elsa watched the streaky shadows the rain threw across the carpet. This was all wrong. Jennifer was supposed to tell her it was all right. She was supposed to understand . She wasnât supposed to lecture her. âIâm twenty. I can do what I want.â
Jen imitated her father, âNot while youâre under my roof.â When Elsa didnât so much as giggle she sighed. âOkay, look. Iâm sorry, all right? But thereâs plenty of other fish in the sea.â
Elsa caught her breath and held it. Plenty of other fish. That was a line straight from the annals of cliché comfort, and so she quit listening, though Jennifer kept talking. And talking.
Elsa cleared her throat loudly, and cut into the rambling spiel. Â âYeah, youâre right. Thanks. Iâll talk to you later.â
âElsa, wait-â
She didnât. She hung up the phone and then, for good measure, she unplugged it. Tears dripped down her cheeks like the rain on the window. She wished sheâd done something besides stare at him. She wished sheâd thrown herself at his feet â her pride be damned! Never, never give in. Never, never let something so important slip away.  Donât just sit there and cry about your lost paradise. Get up and do something about it.
That was what she needed to do.
Elsa stopped in the bathroom and splashed water on her face. As she thought, it did nothing to help, and soaked her shirt. She changed, threw on her raincoat and, without leaving so much as a note, she slipped out the door and into the storming night.
She slid into her car and started it. The heavy engine roared to life and she wished for the millionth time that she could afford one of the cute cars. The radio crackled and Madonna bled through the static. Her tiny, high pitched voice was no comfort, so Elsa turned the radio off.
She turned on the lights and the wipers, put the beast into gear and backed out carefully. Under the streetlights the road was a glare of slick reflections that made it hard to see. Â She navigated slowly, though she was only half focused on the task. Â Most of her attention was turned on where to go.
Twenty minutes later she parked outside of the Roockwood Inn where Tristan had been staying. The vacancy light flickered eerily, and the raindrops echoed off the car; ping, ping, ping. Â The darkness seemed to watch her like a tangible, malevolent creature. She shivered at the thought and climbed out of the car.
Room 622, around the back. That was where heâd been, but no one answered her knock. She pounded again and again, until someone in room 623 shouted at her to be quiet. She couldnât give up, so she hurried through the rain and into the shabby motel office. The walls were stained with tobacco and smoke hung thick in the air. The bell was broken, so she banged on the counter impatiently.
A voice came from behind the nicotine tatty blanket that served as a makeshift door between the office and the back rooms. âYeah, yeah, hang on.â
She didnât have time. Each second might be taking him farther away from her.
The blanket was thrown aside and a short fat man dressed in a horrible Hawaiian short waddled out. He took a puff from his cigar and eyed her critically. âYeah, what can I help you with?â
âIâm looking for someone. Tristan Shelby. He was in room 622.â
The attendant shrugged. âRoom 622 checked out earlier. Sorry, sister.â He looked her up and down again. âJust as well. Iâd let that one go, if I was you.â
âI canât!â she cried passionately. âDo you know where he went?â Tears trembled at the edges of her eyes, ready to drop.
The attendant scratched his stomach thoughtfully. Indecision flickered over his face, but finally her tears swayed him. âI donât know where he went for sure, but he was runninâ with a local crowd. They hang out at the old fair grounds most nights, so he might be down there. But-â he lowered his cigar and met her eyes. âI wouldnât go lookinâ for any of them, if I was you. Theyâre not what you think they are.â
Hope blossomed inside her. The old fairgrounds were a popular hangout for teenagers and, having grown up there, she knew them well. âThank you! Thank you so much!â
âRemember I warned you!â
His words were lost as she dashed out the door into the rain. If she could only catch Tristan and say all those things she should have said earlier, then maybe she could stop this.
The drive was short. The fairgrounds were on the edge of town, and had been abandoned since the late 70âs. Â She parked in the overgrown lot and got out. The tall, wet grass wrapped around her legs like grasping hands. She shook it off and forced her way through it towards the peeling gates. A wooden sunshine cut out still hung above them. Its toothy grin was faded and chipped, and the colors were bleached almost gray. âHave a Happy Dayâ was just visible on the reverse side in faded rainbow letters.
The ticket booth was dark and silent. The windows were a spider web of cracks that told stories of bb guns and rocks. Scattered beer bottles glittered in the flashing lightning and weeds grew through the cracked pavement. The rusted Ferris wheel hulked to her left. Vines covered it and hung down in long, thick tendrils like something from a nightmare scape.
She could feel eyes in the darkness again; feel the night watching her. She forced the silly superstition away and told herself to grow up. There was nothing to be afraid of. Sheâd been there before.
But never alone.
Am I alone now?
âHello?â
No one answered her except the rain. She pulled up her courage and walked deeper into the fairgrounds. Â The carousel loomed ahead of her. The dirty mirrors still tried to glitter on the canopy, and the silent horses stood in a frozen circle, waiting for riders that would never return.
She stopped next to it and waited as a bolt of lightning sliced through the sky. In the instant of light, she looked around madly, but didnât see anyone. Her heart sank as she realized that sheâd missed him. It was too late. Tristan was gone.
Her body sagged and she used the nearest carousel horse to hoist herself onto the large, disc-like base. She felt too morose to do more than sit on the edge and stare at her dangling feet. What was the point? Maybe sheâd get lucky and the carousel would get struck by lightning.
She glanced up to her silent, painted companion. Dark streaks ran down the horseâs face, like old tears. Â Oddly, that made her smile. âYou know what itâs like, donât you? With no reason to go on anymore?â
Thunder snapped and she sighed. She should go home and have a cup of coffee. She should change into her pajamas and go to bed. In the morning she should get up and put on her make up and go to work. Again and again the same routine. Meanwhile, he would be doing what? Or who?
She heard something. Her head snapped up and she looked around, but there was nothing. Only rain and dark and rusted rides. It was probably just a rat, anyway. Yeah. A rat.
A rat with fangs.
A man stood in front of her. To her terrified mind he was only a black shape with snarled lips and long, pointed teeth. A vampire, like Tristan. But, it wasnât Tristan. It was someone else. Someone she needed to get away from.
She gasped and tried to throw herself backwards, but the carousel horse blocked her escape. He was too fast and she was suddenly pinned down on the old carousel. He held her by her wrist and growled into her face. His eyes were strange, not human but more like a wild dog; a wild starving dog.
He didnât ask who she was, or what she was doing. He only stared into her eyes for an agonizing moment and then tore into her neck. Â She screamed, but the sound was drown out by the rolling thunder. Lightning sliced across the sky and in the brightness she could see the rain drops, suspended in midair and the sad, weather stained face of the carousel horse, watching with chipped eyes. The darkness crashed back, but the image stayed in her head, like a still frame. Perhaps the last thing sheâd ever see.
With her last breaths she screamed for Tristan.
There was a blur of motion and suddenly she was free of her attacker. She tried to move, but she was too weak to do more than roll her head to one side. The carousel horse and its neighbors were broken and strewn in the mud. The dark vampire lay nearby, hanging half off the carousel, his face covered in blood.  From the shadows a second man stepped forward. He had bright red hair, like a punk rocker, and though he was soaked he brushed at the mud on his long coat as he approached them.
âSorry, Lennon. Â But I think I need her alive.â The new vampire hopped lithely onto the carousel platform, stepped over the bloody and angry Lennon and came to a stop next to her. He peered down at her like a vulture, his brow puckered. âYou are alive, arenât you?â
Her answer was a gurgle. Terror engulfed her. She tried to raise her hands to her gaping neck, but her arms wouldnât work. All she could do was plead with silent eyes.
Lennon stood and wiped the blood from his chin. âWhat do you need her for?â
The red head arched a single brow. âUnless Iâm much mistaken, she was shouting for our friend Tristan who, if youâll recall, I am trying to locate. It seems that if she knows him, she may well know where he is.â He narrowed his eyes at her. âOr maybe not.â He shrugged as if it was suddenly of no consequence. âIt appears sheâs useless to me, after all, so you can do what you want with her. Either kill her or turn her.â
âTurn her?â Lennon stared at him as if heâd gone crazy. âWhy would I do that?â
The world shifted into shades of gray and Elsa choked. She tried to concentrate, but the conversation slipped through her fingers like tears. Tristan. Where is he? Why isnât he here?
âWhy not?â the red head asked cheerfully. âShe seems to know all about us already. Thatâs hard to come by in a fledgling, and itâs not like you have any, yet-â
Tristan.
â- Besides, it might be fun-â
Where are you?
â-Of course, itâs up to you. I donât care one way or the other-â
Tristan.
â-better decide before itâs too late-â
Goodbye babes, itâs been fun.
The thunder cracked, but the sound was muted behind a wall of black. There was something in her mouth. The taste was bitter and sharp, like sucking a knife blade. She swallowed. It burned like fire. She swallowed again. And again.
It was an hour or more before she could move. Â The first thing she did was sit up and touch her neck. The wound was gone. Even the blood had been washed away by the steady drum of rain.
Lennon sat nearby, his knees up and his eyes on her. âIâm Lennon,â he said pointlessly. Â Then he half-lifted a hand in greeting. âHey.â
Her eyes skipped around, but they seemed to be alone. âWhereâs-â
âThat red haired guy?â She nodded and Lennon shrugged. âWent back to work, I guess. Heâs hunting them. Tristan and his partner. â
âHunting them?â she echoed.  âHeâs not going to â I mean he wonâtâŠâ
âKill him?â
The words were too horrible to contemplate, but there they were, just the same. Lennon didnât explain further, so she forced the question out, âWill he?â
Lennonâs expression softened. âWere you guys, you know?â The answer was in her eyes, and he suddenly looked away. âI donât know. It depends, I guess. If he just goes quietly then probably not.â
Despite his attempt at reassurance, it was impossible to combat her panic. âBut why is he after Tristan?â
âI donât know. Theyâre wanted for something. Hard to tell.â Lennon fished a soggy pack of cigarettes out of his pocket. He tried to slide one out, but it crumbled in his hand. With a mournful sigh he tossed it away. âMaybe because the guyâs obviously telling humans about us.â She opened her mouth to ask what he meant and he added, âYou are â were – human, and he told you.â
Elsa couldnât argue with that, though the word âwereâ disturbed her.
Lennon threw the ruined cigarettes away and stood up. âWe better go. Iâve got to find my brother, then we need to get back to the den before sunrise.â
âWhereâs that?â she mumbled, still lost in the intricate twists of the nightâs events.
âNew York.â
Her attention snapped to him. âI canât go to New York! I have to go to work tomorrow-â The sentence died on her lips as the full realization of her new status crashed down on her. She struggled to come to terms with everything that had in the last few hours. Hours. Was that all it had been? A few hours had taken Tristan away and changed her?
Changed her like sheâd once asked Tristan to do.
âHave fun with that.â Lennon stood and offered her a hand. âI hope you donât act this stupid when you meet Claudius.â
A mixture of panic and elation coursed through her and she fought to master it. âIs Claudius your brother?â
âHardly!â He snickered. âHeâs the coven master. Weâre supposed to get permission before we make fledglings.â He frowned. âIâm not really sure what to tell him. Â Iâm not really sure why I did it.â he squinted ta her. âYouâre not bad looking, I guess, but we need to work on a better story that this.â He waved his hand around the abandoned grounds as if to indicate the truth.
She had no answer for him, though he didnât seem to expect one. He tugged her to her feet and led her through the rainy fairgrounds towards the exit.
Vampire.
Somewhere in the back of her mind she could hear Jenniferâs voice echoing, âHe thought he was a vampire.â
Thatâs because he is, and now so am I.
Vampire.
The sign over the exit made her giggle softly. âHave a Happy Dayâ. Bizarrely, she would never have another day again. There would only be night after night from now on. But it was all right; or it would be once she found Tristan. Never, never give in. Never, never let something so important slip away. Â Donât just sit there and cry about your lost paradise. Get up and do something about it.
And now she had an eternity to do it in.
**********
Next up is either Herrick or Jeda, depending on my mood. (Herrick is so minor that his only contribution is he dies and Jorick and Katelina inherit his coffin, so he may get skipped.)
Song playing at the moment – Harleys & Indians – Roxette