Read Undead and Unwelcome Online
Authors: MaryJanice Davidson
pissed during some of the questioning. Then he thought the rest of it was funny.” “Your
husband is a whack job.” “Tell me. But that’s not even my biggest problem right now.”
“Split ends?” Jessica inquired. “Shut your cake hole.” “Ah, cake. That reminds me, I
missed lunch today.” “Can you stay focused, please?” “Sorry, forgot—only for a minute—
that everything’s about you all the time.” “I’ve mentioned my deep hatred for you, right?”
“Twice today.” “What I’d like to know is what’s the deal with my brother?” I patted
BabyJon on his diapered rump; sunset was about half an hour away. “Derik acts like
BabyJon’s head can spin all the way around, and Michael keeps forgetting I even brought
a baby! Something is rotten in Hallmark.” “Denmark.” “Right.” “Don’t take this the
wrong way, Betsy, because I know you love him, but he
is
the spawn of the Ant and your
dad. Who knows what twisted up his DNA?” “That’s fair enough,” I admitted. We were
slowly making our way from the beach to the mansion. “Especially when you consider the
Ant’s
other
kid.” “There’s nothing wrong with Laura that getting laid wouldn’t cure.” I
started laughing so hard I nearly dropped the baby. “That’s quite enough about my siblings
from you,” I said, trying (and failing) to sound stern. “Somebody’s got to help you keep it
real.” “Nobody’s said ‘keep it real’ for about five years.” We walked through the front
door and into the large receiving hall, and I still wasn’t used to the immensity that was
Wyndham Manor. It made our place in St. Paul look like an RV. I was about to comment
on that to Jess when I noticed a bunch of people running toward us. I instinctively
clutched the baby—What now, for God’s sake?—only to see them run straight past us.
“Betsy, oh my God! Look!” I spun and looked. A kid—twelve? thirteen?—was falling, oh
my God, he was actually
falling
from the third-level landing, headed straight for the
marble floor. I thrust BabyJon at Jessica, but it was too late and the poor kid hit the floor
with an awful, wet smack.
Call an ambulance!” I screamed as a ring of adults surrounded the boy. “He’s—what the
hell
?” He was growling. At least three adults went reeling backward, and I saw a blurred
face, lots of white teeth, a snarl of fur. And the sounds, dear God, the
sounds
! It was the
noise you’d hear coming from a slaughterhouse. Or if a cat was tossed into a pack of wild
dogs. It was chilling; it was terrifying. Suddenly Jeannie was there, hauling Jessica and me
back by our elbows. “You need to go,” she said firmly. “Now.” She was practically
carrying us; our heels were dragging across the floor. “Right now!” “What—what’s going
on?” Jessica asked, trying to stare at the kid and extricate herself from Jeannie’s grip while
keeping her balance. “He’s only eleven. This is his first change. You need to leave right
now. He won’t be able to—” More adults fell back. One of them spun right into Jessica,
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) and she—oh my God, she— She dropped my brother. Right in the path of a brand-new
werewolf. The crazed adolescent (was there any other kind?) charged at my brother and
bit him. I screamed, high and shrill . . .
(Elizabeth? What’s wrong?)
... and cried out for
my brother, now surely dead at the hands of— He was laughing. BabyJon was laughing.
The new werewolf took off with his tail between his legs with at least three adults in
pursuit, and suddenly the marble floor rushed up at me and hit me in the face.
“. . . maybe she . . .” “. . . couldn’t have . . .” “... her a minute ...” “. . . just the shock . . .”
I opened my eyes and saw Jeannie, Michael, Sinclair, and Jessica all peering down at me.
“Hey, there you are,” Jess said. She was, thank God, holding BabyJon, who was wriggling
and whining to come to me. “You fainted.” “I did not faint. Vampires don’t faint.” “I
know of at least one who does,” Sinclair teased. “What
happened
?” I asked, sitting up.
“We were hoping you could tell us,” Michael said. “Hey, one minute I’m minding my own
business and the next some poor kid is falling to his death—except he didn’t die—and
then trying to eat my brother. Who appears to be not eaten.” In fact, BabyJon appeared to
be fine. Which was impossible. I reached up and took him from Jess, inspected him, and
found nothing except some saliva. No bite. No blood. Unbelievable. “—don’t normally go
through their first change until thirteen or fourteen,” Michael was saying. “Aaron’s only
eleven; nobody expected him to change during this phase.” “Is that why he did it while it
was still daylight?” Jessica asked. Nobody answered her, which was just rude. Super-
Secret Werewolf Business, no doubt. And speaking of daylight, there wasn’t much of it
left. I imagine Michael was going to have to get furry pretty soon. Which meant—oh, shit.
“Sinclair!” I cried. “This castle is practically all windows, what the hell are you doing out
of our room?” He looked at me as if I’d suddenly grown another head. “You were
screaming,” he said simply. “In my head. I had to come.” “He jumped down from the
third-floor landing,” Jessica added. “I can’t believe his femurs aren’t in his lungs right
now.” “Gross,” was my only comment. “I don’t understand any of this,” Michael said.
“You said Aaron bit the baby? You must be mistaken; there isn’t a scratch on him. And
whose baby is that, anyway?” Oh, for the love— “Wait a second. Wait.” Jessica frowned.
She frowned harder. Her eyes went all narrow and squinty. Her lips twitched. Michael and
Jeannie looked alarmed, but I knew that expression. It was her It’s on the Tip of My
Tongue look. Then: “Bite him.” “What?” “Bite the baby.” “Nobody’s biting anybody’s
baby,” I protested. “Least of all this one.” “I’ll bite him,” Jeannie offered. Jessica shook
her head. “It’s got to be one of the vampires.” “Ah,” Sinclair said. “I see what you’re
getting at.” “Swell,” I grumped. “Somebody want to clue me in?” “BabyJon may well be
immune to dangers others would find crippling, even fatal.” “He’s not immune to
anything,” I protested. “He’s had colds. He’s had shots at the pediatrician. He—don’t do
that!” Sinclair, moving with the spooky speed that, even after all this time, startled the hell
out of me, dipped his head and slashed at BabyJon with his jaws. He made a rattlesnake
look slow. I lashed out and punched him in the eye before I knew what I was doing. Then,
when I did know what I was doing, I slapped at his shoulders. It probably looked to the
others like he was on fire and I was trying to put him out. “What—do you think—you’re
doing?” “Proving—ouch—Jessica’s theory.” He rubbed his eye. “Look.” “Look at
what
,
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) you psychotic?” “Look at the baby.” BabyJon yawned, unmoved by either a) the werewolf
attack or b) the vampire bite. “He doesn’t have a mark on him!” Jeannie marveled. “That’s
the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen!” “What, you’re saying he’s—what? Invulnerable?”
I shook my head, feeling like I should be wearing a dunce cap. “But he’s
not
. You guys
know he’s not. He’s skinned his knee crawling, he’s—” “Invulnerable to paranormal
harm,” Sinclair said, and Jessica nodded. “Wait a minute,” Michael said. “That’s
your
baby?” “Well, look who just caught up. Seriously? You guys think that’s what it is?” “I
saw Aaron try to bite him,” Jeannie said quietly. “It would have killed a normal infant.”
“When did you have a baby?” Michael asked, but I waved off his silly-ass questions. “So
that’s why Derik kept freaking out around him. He knew something was different about
BabyJon, but not what. And—Jeannie, how would a Pack leader deal with something he
could never hurt?” “Why . . . I suppose he would try to gain dominance of some sort,”
Jeannie replied slowly. “That’s their nature. That’s—” “That’s why Michael kept
forgetting about BabyJon. He can’t dominate someone if he doesn’t remember him.”
“How long has this baby been here?” Michael demanded, poor guy. He was sounding
more and more bewildered . . . and the sun was dipping lower every second. Explanations
would have to wait. “We’ll tell you all about it,” Jeannie promised. “Later.” “When you
aren’t furry and drooly and such,” I added. “So a vampire can bite—and nothing will
happen. A werewolf can chomp, a fairy can whack him with her wand—and nothing.”
Jessica paused, deep in thought. “Nothing at all. Wow.” “But why?” Jeannie asked. “Why
would this baby be special?” “It’s a really long story,” I said. “Which I’ll probably never
tell you.” Jeannie laughed. “That seems fair.”
Dude,
Not only is Tina gone, but her laptop is missing as well. I had hoped to use her e-
mail address to get Betsy and Sinclair’s attention, but a room-to-room search revealed
nothing.
I was far too distracted at the hospital to do a reliable job, so I was taking
unpaid sick time as I tried to figure out what the hell to do.
I managed to keep it casual
as I asked Laura what she’d done with Tina’s stuff, but just got another one of her insipid
smiles and assurances that I didn’t need to worry about a thing.
Ha. Worrying was more
or less all I was doing. And each time Laura tried to assure me she hadn’t lost her mind,
she sounded a little less sane.
“Marc, vampires are—with the possible exception of my
sister—evil by nature. Betsy’s life would be so much simpler if she didn’t have to spend
so much time policing monsters. And,” she went on with the fervor of an evangelist, “not
only am I helping Betsy, I’m keeping the peace in the Twin Cities, keeping the devil
worshippers busy doing God’s work—it’s all good.”
“Having me followed every minute
of the day or night is God’s work?”
She had the grace to flush a little at that. Maybe she
wasn’t entirely gone. “Marc, you don’t know any better. You’ll give Betsy all the wrong
ideas. I want her to come home, too, but not until I’ve finished working on the surprise.”
“The
surprise
? You mean there’s more to come?” I tried not to sound as horrified as I
felt.
“Sure! Lots more. You’ll see, Marc. Besides, they’re for your own protection. We
can’t have anything happen to you, now can we?”
“Will you at least consider the
possibility that you’ve gone insane?” I asked, and got a soft laugh in response. She had
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)
thought I was kidding.
“You worry too much.”
“What are you going to tell Betsy and
Sinclair when they get back?”
“That I kept things safe for them,” she replied promptly.
That you’ve gone looney tunes, I thought, but prudently kept that to myself.
I tried
arguing with her for another ten minutes, and kept getting that sweet smile for a
response. Dude, after a while I just wanted to whack that smirk off her face.
At least we
still had an Internet connection, though what I knew about such things could be carried
in an emesis basin. E-mails were about all I knew. Sure, I could have gone to an expert, a
real techno geek . . . except I had Satan’s Minions constantly on my heels.
In desperation
I waited until she and the devil worshippers had left on another kill-all-vamps mission,
then typed out a quick e-mail to Betsy. And sent it. And sent it. And sent it. And sent it.
Ah, there’s my boy.” Jessica and I stared at each other, then Sinclair. It was almost two
o’clock in the morning; the place was crawling with werewolves. I was a little curious and
was interested in going outside, but Jessica was understandably nervous and had
practically barricaded herself in the downstairs library. And what a library! I swear, it was
at least half the size of the New York City Public Library. Towering bookshelves,
mahogany furniture, a row of computers . . . the only thing it was missing was a pair of
stone lions. Maybe it seemed larger because it had been empty except for Jessica, me, and
the baby. In fact, the mansion was practically deserted. But occasionally we could hear
faint wolf howls from outside. And now here was Sinclair bustling in and actually holding
his arms out for BabyJon, formerly his number one rival for my affection. “Your boy?” I
asked, and Jessica raised her eyebrows. “You know,” Sinclair said, hovering over the baby
and me, “it’s not too soon to start planning his education.” “He can’t even walk yet,”
Jessica pointed out. “Oh,
I
get it. BabyJon is invulnerable to paranormal harm, so suddenly
you’re taking interest in his well-being.” “Elizabeth, you’ve got me all wrong.” Sinclair
had the nerve to look and sound wounded. “As your husband, and his co-guardian, it’s my
responsibility to do right by this boy.” “Sure it is.” I handed BabyJon over and Sinclair
was so startled he juggled the baby for a few seconds before holding him at arm’s length.