Brandi (30 page)

Read Brandi Online

Authors: Donna McDonald

BOOK: Brandi
6.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 

“Dwayne, if I hear you say that I’m gonna bang him one more time, I will not let you borrow my black Mary Jane pumps. Ever again.”

 

Dwayne made the international “zip the lip and throw away the key” sign while silently mouthing that I was going to bang Hank.

 

“I think you should bang him if he’s a hot as you said.” Dwayne made himself comfortable on my couch and turned on the TV.

 

“When did I ever say he was hot?” I demanded as I took the remote out of his hands. I was not watching any more
Dance Moms
. “I never said he was hot.”

 

“Paaaaleese,” Dwayne flicked his pale hand over his shoulder and rolled his eyes.

 

“What was that?”

 

“What was what?” he asked, confused.

 

“That shoulder thing you just did.”

 

“Oh, I was flicking my hair over my shoulder in a
girlfriend
move.”

 

“Okay, don’t do that. It doesn’t work. You’re as bald as a cue ball.”

 

“But it’s the new move,” he whined.

 

Oh my god, Vampyres were such high maintenance. “According to who?” I yanked my suitcase out from under my bed and started throwing stuff in.

 

“Kim Kardashian.”

 

I refused to dignify that with so much as a look.

 

“Fine,” he huffed. “But if you say one word about my skinny jeans I am so out of here.”

 

I considered it, but I knew he was serious. As crazy as he drove me, I adored him. He was my only real friend in Chicago and I had no intention of losing him.

 

“I know he’s hot,” Dwayne said. “Look at you—you’re so gorge it’s redonkulous. You’re all legs and boobs and hair and lips—you’re far too beautiful to be hung up on a goober.”

 

“Are you calling me shallow?” I snapped as I ransacked my tiny apartment for clean clothes. Damn it, tomorrow was laundry day. I was going to have to pack dirty clothes.

 

“So he’s ugly and puny and wears bikini panties?”

 

“No! He’s hotter than Satan’s underpants and he wears boxer briefs,” I shouted. “You happy?”

 

“He’s actually a nice guy.”

 

“You’ve met Hank?” I was so confused I was this close to making fun of his skinny jeans just so he would leave.

 

“Satan. He’s not as bad as everyone thinks.”

 

How was it that everyone I came in contact with today stole my ability to speak? Thankfully, I was interrupted by a knock at my door.

 

“You expecting someone?” Dwayne asked as he pilfered the remote back and found
Dance Moms.

 

“No.”

 

I peeked through the peephole. Nobody came to my place except Dwayne and the occasional pizza delivery guy or Chinese food take out guy or Indian food take out guy.
Wait. What the hell was my boss doing here?

 

“Angela?”

 

“You going to let me in?”

 

“Depends.”

 

“Open the damn door.”

 

I did.

 

Angela tromped into my shoebox and made herself at home. Her hair was truly spectacular. It looked like she might have even pulled out a clump on the left side. “You want to tell me why the sheriff and alpha of Hung Island, Georgia says he won’t work with you?”

 

“Um…no?”

 

“He said he had a hard time believing someone as flaky and irresponsible as you had become an agent for the Council and he wants someone else.” Angela narrowed her eyes at me and took the remote form Dwayne. “Spill it, Essie.”

 

I figured the best way to handle this was to lie—hugely. However, gay Vampyre boyfriends had a way of interrupting and screwing up all your plans.

 

“Well, you see…”

 

“He’s her mate and he dipped his stick in several other…actually
many
other oil tanks. So she dumped his furry player ass, snuck away in the middle of the night and hadn’t really planned on ever going back there again.” Dwayne sucked in a huge breath, which was ridiculous because Vampyres didn’t breathe.

 

It took everything I had not to scream and go all Wolfy. “Dwayne, clearly you want me to go medieval on your lily white ass because I can’t imagine why you would utter such bullshit to my boss.”

 

“Doesn’t sound like bullshit to me,” Angela said as she channel surfed and landed happily on an old episode of
Cagney and Lacey
. “We might have a problem here.”

 

“Are you replacing me?” Hank Wilson had screwed me over once when I was his. He was not going to do it again when I wasn’t.

 

“Your call,” she said. Dwayne, who was an outstanding shoplifter, covertly took back the remote and flipped over to the Food Channel. Angela glanced up at the tube and gave Dwayne the evil eye.

 

“I refuse to watch lesbians fight crime in the eighties. I’ll get hives,” he explained, tilted his head to the right and gave Angela a smile. He was so pretty it was silly—piercing blue eyes and body to die for. Even my boss had a hard time resisting his charm.

 

“Fine,” she grumbled.

 

“Excuse me,” I yelled. “This conversation is about me, not testosterone ridden women cops with bad hair, hives or food. It’s my life we’re talking about here—me, me, me!” My voice had risen to decibels meant to attract stray animals within a ten-mile radius, evidenced by the wincing and ear covering.

 

“Essie, are you done?” Dwayne asked fearfully.

 

“Possibly. What did you tell him?” I asked Angela.

 

“I told him the Council has the last word in all matters. Always. And if he had a problem with it, he could take it up with the elders next month when they stay awake long enough to listen to the petitions of their people.”

 

“Oh my god, that’s awesome,” I squealed. “What did he say?”

 

“That if we send you down, he’ll give you bus money so you can hightail your sorry cowardly butt right back out of town.”

 

Was she grinning at me, and was that little shit Dwayne jotting the conversation down in the notes section on his phone?

 

“Let me tell you something,” I ground out between clenched teeth as I confiscated Dwayne’s phone and pocketed it. “I am going to Hung Island, Georgia tomorrow and I will kick his ass. I will find the killer first and then I will castrate the alpha of the Georgia Pack…with a dull butter knife.”

 

Angela laughed and Dwayne jackknifed over on the couch in a visceral reaction to my plan. I stomped into my bathroom and slammed the door to make my point, then pressed my ear to the rickety wood to hear them talk behind my back.

 

“I’ll bet you five hundred dollars she’s gonna bang him,” Dwayne told Angela.

 

“I’ll bet you a thousand that you’re right,” she shot back.

 

“You’re on.”

 

Chapter 2

 

“This music is going to make me yack.” Dwayne moaned and put his hands over his ears.

 

Trying to ignore him wasn’t working. I promised myself I wouldn’t put him out of the car until we were at least a hundred miles outside of Chicago. I figured anything less than that wouldn’t be the kind of walk home that would teach him a lesson.

 

“First of all, Vampyres can’t yack and I don’t recall asking you to come with me,” I replied and cranked up The Clash.

 

“You have got to be kidding.” He huffed and flipped the station to Top Forty. “You need me.”

 

“Really?”

 

“Oh my god,” Dwayne shrieked. “I luurrve Lady Gaga.”

 

“That’s why I need you?”

 

“Wait. What?”

 

“I need you because you love The Gaga?”

 

Dwayne rolled his eyes. “Everyone loves The Gaga. You need me because you need to show your hometown and Hank the Hooker that you have a new man in your life.”

 

“You’re a Vampyre.”

 

“Yes, and?”

 

“Well, um…you’re gay.”

 

“What does that have to do with anything? I am hotter than asphalt in August and I have a huge package.”

 

While his points were accurate, there was no mistaking his sexual preference. The skinny jeans, starched muscle shirt, canvas Mary Janes and the gold hoop earrings were an undead giveaway.

 

“You know, I think you should just be my best friend. I want to show them I don’t need a man to make it in this world…okay?” I glanced over and he was crying. Shitshitshit. Why did I always say the wrong thing? “Dwayne, I’m sorry. You can totally be my…”

 

“You really consider me your best friend?” he blubbered. “I have never had a best friend in all my three hundred years. I’ve tried, but I just…” He broke down and let her rip.

 

“Yes, you’re my best friend, you idiot. Stop crying. Now.” Snark I could deal with. Tears? Not so much.

 

“Oh my god, I just feel so happy,” he gushed. “And I want you to know if you change your mind about the boyfriend thing just wink at me four times and I’ll stick my tongue down your throat.”

 

“Thanks, I’ll keep that in mind.”

 

“Anything for my best friend. Ohhh Essie, are there any gay bars in Hung?”

 

This was going to be a wonderful trip.

 

***

 

One way in to Hung Island, Georgia. One way out. The bridge was long and the ocean was beautiful. Sun glistened off the water and sparkled like diamonds. Dwayne was quiet for the first time in fifteen hours. As we pulled into town, my gut clenched and I started to sweat. This was stupid—so very stupid. The nostalgic pull of this place was huge and I felt sucked back in immediately.

 

“Holy Hell,” Dwayne whispered. “It’s beautiful here. How did you leave this place?”

 

He was right. It was beautiful. It had the small town feel mixed up with the ocean and land full of wild grasses and rolling hills. How did I leave?

 

“I left because I hate it here,” I lied. “We’ll do the job, castrate the alpha with a butter knife and get out. You got it?”

 

“Whatever you say, best friend. Whatever you say.” He grinned.

 

“I’m gonna drop you off at my Grandma Bobby Sue’s. She doesn’t exactly know we’re coming so you have to be on your best behavior.”

 

“Will you be?”

 

“Will I be what?” God, Vamps were tiresome.

 

“On your best behavior.”

 

“Absolutely not. We’re here.”

 

I stopped my crappy car in front of a charming old Craftsman. Flowers covered every inch of the yard. It was a literal explosion of riotous color and I loved it. Granny hated grass—found the color offensive. It was the home I grew up in. Granny BS, as everyone loved to call her, had raised me after my parents died in a horrific car accident when I was four. I barely remembered my parents, but Granny had told me beautiful bedtime stories about them my entire childhood.

 

“OMG, this place is so cute I could scream.” Dwayne squealed and jumped out of the car into the blazing sunlight. All the stories about Vamps burning to ash or sparkling like diamonds in the sun were a myth. The only thing that could kill Weres and Vamps were silver bullets, decapitation, fire and a silver stake in the heart.

 

Grabbing Dwayne by the neck of his muscle shirt, I stopped him before he went tearing into the house. “Granny is old school. She thinks Vamps are…you know.”

 

“Blood sucking leeches who should be eliminated?” Dwayne grinned from ear to ear. He loved a challenge. Crap.

 

“I wouldn’t go that far, but she’s old and set in her geezer ways. So if you have to, steer clear.”

 

“I’ll have her eating kibble out of my manicured lily white hand in no time at…holy shit!” Dwayne screamed and ducked as a blur of Granny BS came flying out of the house and tackled my ass in a bed of posies.

 

“Mother Humper.” I grunted and struggled as I tried to shove all ninety-five pounds of pissed off Grandma Werewolf away from me.

 

“Gimme that stomach,” she hissed as she yanked up my shirt. Thank the Lord I was wearing a bra. Dwayne stood in mute shock and just watched me get my butt handed to me by my tiny granny, who even at eighty was the spitting image of a miniature Sophia Loren in her younger years.

 

“Get off of me, you crazy old bag,” I ground out and tried to nail her with a solid left. She ducked and backslapped my head.

 

“I said no tattoos and no piercings till you’re fifty,” she yelled. “Where is it?”

 

“Oh my GOD,” I screeched as I trapped her head with my legs in a scissors hold. “You need meds.”

 

“Tried ‘em. They didn’t work,” she grumbled as she escaped from my hold. She grabbed me from behind as I tried to make a run for my car and ripped out my belly button ring.

 

“Ahhhhhhgrhupcraaap, that hurt, you nasty old bat from Hell.” I screamed and looked down at the bloody hole that used to be really cute and sparkly. “That was a one carat diamond, you ancient witch.”

 

Both of her eyebrows shot up and I swear to god they touched her hairline.

 

“Okay, fine,” I muttered. “It was cubic zirconia, but it was NOT cheap.”

 

“Hookers have belly rings,” she snapped.

 

“No, hookers have pimps. Normal people have belly rings, or at least they used to,” I shot back as I examined the wound that was already closing up.

Other books

Saving Kabul Corner by N. H. Senzai
Freddie Ramos Takes Off by Jacqueline Jules
Last Chance Saloon by Marian Keyes
Alpha Girl by Kate Bloomfield
The Battle for the Ringed Planet by Johnson, Richard Edmond
Dead Spots by Rhiannon Frater
Temptation’s Edge by Eve Berlin
End of Watch by Baxter Clare