Vampire Kisses (4 page)

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Authors: Ellen Schreiber

BOOK: Vampire Kisses
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“Searching.”

“For what?”

“There was some blood—”

“Blood?” Becky cried. “I’ve killed someone!”

“Calm down. It could have been a deer.”

“A deer doesn’t wear black jeans! I’m calling nine-one-one.”

“Go ahead—but where’s the body?” I reasoned. “You weren’t going fast enough to catapult him into the woods.”

“Maybe he’s under the truck!”

“I already looked. You probably just bumped him and he took off. But I want to make sure.”

Becky grabbed my arm, digging her nails into my flesh. “Raven, don’t go! Let’s get out of here! I’m calling nine-one-one!”

“Lock the door if you have to,” I said, tearing myself free. “But keep the engine and the lights on.”

“Raven, tell me this…” Becky exclaimed breathlessly, gazing at me with terrified eyes. “What normal guy would be walking in the middle of a pitch-black road? Do you think he might be a—?”

I felt the pleasant tingle of goosebumps on my arms.

“Becky, don’t get my hopes up!”

I combed the bushes that went down to the creek. Then I headed for the hillside leading up toward the Mansion.

I let out a shriek.

“What is it?” Becky cried, rolling down the window.

Blood! Thick puddles in the grass! But there was no body! I followed the bloodstains, afraid bits of his corpse were strewn everywhere. And then I tripped over something hard. I looked down, anticipating a severed head. I apprehensively shone my flashlight on it. It was a dented paint bucket.

“Is he dead?” Becky gasped as I returned to the truck.

“No, but I think you may have killed his can,” I said, dangling the bucket in front of her. “What was he doing painting in the middle of the night? And where was he going?”

“It was just paint!” Becky said with a gasp of relief, hanging up her cell phone and revving the engine. “Let’s get out of here!”

“What was that jerk doing walking in the middle of the road at night?” I wondered out loud. “Maybe he was going to paint some graffiti or something.”

“Where did he come from? Where could he have gone so fast?” she mumbled back at me.

In the rearview mirror I caught the reflection of the darkened Mansion just in time to see a light go on in the attic window.

T
he story of Naked Trevor spread immediately through Dullsville High. Some students said he stumbled into Matt’s house in a trash-bag diaper; others said he was found passed out naked on the back lawn. No one had a clue I was involved. Only Trevor Boy knew the real story. Apparently he tried to pass it off to his buddies as an encounter with a cheerleader. Either way, everyone got a laugh.

Trevor left me alone. He wouldn’t even make eye contact with me. Gothic Girl had finally gotten the goods on the popular Soccer Snob. But I didn’t want him to accuse me of theft. I had to give his clothes back, right?

First there was the shoe. I think it was the left. I strung it on the outside of my locker. At first no one seemed to notice the hanging loafer. Those who finally did looked at it and walked on. But the next morning it was gone. One person had noticed it. Now it was time for others to take notice besides good ol’ Trevor.

The right brown loafer was strung up in the same fashion. But next to it was a sign:
MISSING SOMETHING, TREVOR
?

This time I heard giggles as students passed. They didn’t realize whose locker it was. But they’d soon be catching on.

Each day a sock would hang out, or a T-shirt. I started noticing Snob Girls who would never talk to me suddenly looking over in algebra with smiling approval. They had been Trevor Tree Girls, promised everything, with nothing to show for it. Well, I had plenty to show.

By the time his khaki pants were hung out, complete with grass stains and dirt, everyone knew whose locker it was. Now kids in the hall were grinning at me. Guys weren’t exactly asking me out, but I was suddenly popular—in a quiet kind of way.

Except, of course, with Trevor. But I felt safe. Now that everyone knew whose locker it was, he would be the prime suspect if anything happened to me.

But he did make the odd threat.

“I’ll kick your ass, Monster,” he said one day. He grabbed my jaw in his hands when Becky and I were starting to walk home.

“Combat boots hurt more than loafers, Neanderthal,” I shot back. My face was pressed between his hands.

“Let her go,” Matt said, pulling him away. I could see even Matt had enjoyed my prank. I’m sure he got tired of the Trevor attitude sometimes. After all, he was stuck being Trevor’s best friend.

“You’ll never be anything more than a freak!” Trevor shouted. Fortunately Matt pulled him away again. I didn’t feel like going to battle after a long day at school.

“You just wait! You just wait!” he called back to me.

“Talk to my lawyer!” I yelled, secretly hoping I wasn’t going to need a plastic surgeon instead.

 

 

 

Time for the grand finale. Lots of students were gathered around my locker. I even saw a freshman taking pictures.

It was the climax everyone had been waiting for: Trevor’s white Calvin Klein underwear hot-glued to my locker. The sign underneath read:
WHITE IS FOR VIRGINS, RIGHT TREVOR
?

It would be up there for a while. Everyone saw it. I mean everyone!

“Raven, you defaced school property,” Principal Smith scolded me later that day. I had been in Principal Smith’s office so many times, it was like seeing an old friend.

“Those lockers have been here forever, Frank,” I replied. “Maybe it’s time you tell the school board we need new ones.”

“I don’t think you see the seriousness involved here, Raven. You ruined a locker and embarrassed an honors student.”

“What honor? Ask your straight-A cheerleaders and half the drill team how many times he’s embarrassed them!”

Principal Smith rattled his pencil in frustration.

“We need to get you involved in something, Raven. Some club you can belong to, something that will help you make friends.”

“The chess club have any openings? Or how about the math club?” I asked sarcastically.

“There are other activities.”

“Can you guarantee me a spot on the cheerleading squad? Of course, I’d have to wear a black pleated skirt.”

“That’s one you have to try out for. But I bet you’d be great.”

“Obviously honors students, like Trevor, really respect cheerleaders.”

“Raven, high school is hard for most kids. That’s just the way it is. Even the people who look as though they belong usually don’t feel they belong. But you have so much going for you. You’re imaginative. You’re smart. You’ll figure it out. Just don’t damage any more lockers while you’re trying to find the answers.”

“Sure, Frank,” I said, taking the detention slip. “See you soon.”

“Not too soon, okay, Raven?”

“I’ll try not to work you too hard,” I said and closed the door.

 

 

 

The next day I noticed something on my locker that I hadn’t put up. In black paint was written:
RAVEN IS A HORROR
!

I smiled. Very clever, Trevor. Very clever. I felt warm inside. It was the first time he had ever complimented me.

H
alloween. My favorite day of the year. The one day of the year that I fit in. It’s the only day everyone accepts and compliments me, and I even get rewarded for it by generous neighbors who don’t think I’m too old to celebrate—or are more likely too afraid of what my tricks would be.

But this year I decided I really wanted to wear a costume. I shopped in stores I usually never went to and borrowed things from my mom. I strangled my hair into a ponytail and pink barrettes and wore a lusciously soft white cashmere sweater with a pink tennis skirt. I gave myself a healthy glow with some of my mom’s base and blush and wore a soft plum lipstick. I even carried my dad’s tennis racket. I went around the house saying things like, “Mummy dear, I’ll be home after my tennis lesson!”

Nerd Boy didn’t recognize me as I passed him in the kitchen. Then his mouth dropped open when he realized it was me and not a neighbor’s kid dropping over for sugar.

“I’ve never seen you look so…good,” he said, dressed as a baseball player. I thought I was going to be sick right there and then.

My parents wanted to take pictures. Go figure. They were acting as if I was going to the prom. I let them take just one. I figured my dad should finally have a picture of me he could proudly hang at the office.

 

 

 

Becky and I were eating lunch in the cafeteria later that day. Everyone looked at me like I was the new girl. Really, no one recognized me. It was fun at first, then a bit annoying. I got stares when I dressed in black. I got stares when I dressed in white. I couldn’t win! Then Trevor came into the cafeteria dressed as Dracula. His hair was slicked back, and he was sporting a black cape. He had plastic fangs and red-hot lips.

He stood with Matt as he glanced all around to find me. He wanted to rub his new look in my face. Matt finally pointed to me and Trevor did a double take. He stared at me long and hard, looked me up and down. I had never seen him gaze at me like that before. It was as if he was in major Crushville, as he checked out my preppy white sweater and healthy glow.

I thought for sure he’d come over and say something stupid, but instead he sat at the opposite side of the cafeteria with his back to me. He even left before I did. I was free of him! But I was wrong. I should have known our truce wouldn’t last.

 

 

 

My little pumpkin basket was almost filled with Smarties, Snickers, Mary Janes, Jolly Ranchers, Dubble Bubble gum, and lots of other tasty treats. And most importantly—spider rings and temporary tattoos. Becky and I had walked all over town and now wondered what awaited us at the front door of the mysterious Mansion. We were saving the best house for last. Apparently so was everyone else.

There was actually a line to the front door. It was like we were at Disney World. Ghouls, punks, bums, Mickey Mouse, Fred Flintstone, and Homer Simpson were all eagerly waiting their turn. And a bunch of coiffed parents who showed up to steal a peek inside. The circus was in town, and everyone had come to look at the freaks.

“He’s really creepy,” a twelve-year-old Frankenstein remarked to a pint-sized werewolf as they passed us.

Nerd Boy spotted me and Becky as he walked down the driveway.

“It’s well worth the wait, Raven. You’ll love it! This is my sister!” he proudly said to his geekoid Batman friend, who looked at me with junior crush-boy eyes.

“Did you see any shrunken heads? Or monsters with fangs?” I asked.

“No.”

“Then maybe we’re wasting our time.”

“That old man is really freaky. He looks scary and he isn’t even wearing a costume!”

I could see Nerd Boy was trying to bond with me, since this was the first time he could actually show me off to his friend. But I could also see Nerdo was expecting a verbal body slam.

“Thanks for the info.”

“Thanks? Uh…yeah…of course, Sis.”

“I’ll see you at home, if you want to trade any candy bars.”

Nerd Boy nodded willingly. He smiled and left like he had finally met his long lost sister.

Becky and I eagerly waited our turn. We were last in line, and as Charlie Brown and a witch who were in front of us stepped away with their goods, the door closed. I looked at the S-shaped knocker and wondered if it was the initial of the new owner. When I peered closer, I saw it was a serpent with emerald eyes. I rapped it gently, hoping the Gothic guy would answer. I wanted to ask him if he was the one in the road the other night, and if so, what he had been doing? Most people got their exercise at the gym, not on spooky country roads in the dead of night. But no one answered.

“Let’s go,” Becky suggested nervously.

“No, we waited forever for this! I’m not turning back until I get some candy. He owes us!”

“I’m tired. We’ve been out all night. It’s probably just some creepy old guy who wants to go to bed. And I do, too.”

“We can’t leave now.”

“I’m going home, Raven.”

“I can’t believe you’re so chicken. C’mon, I thought we were best friends.”

“We are. But it’s late.”

“Okay, okay. I’ll call you tomorrow and tell you all about Mister Creepy.”

There were enough treaters walking around that I wasn’t afraid for mousy Becky. She’d get home safe. But would I?

I stared at the serpent knocker and wondered what stood behind the huge wooden door. Maybe the new owner would pull me inside and hold me captive in his haunted mansion. I could only hope!

I knocked again and waited. And waited.

I knocked again. I banged and banged and banged. My hand was starting to hurt. I dashed around to the side, then I heard the locks coming unlatched and the creaky door open. I quickly ran back up the front steps. And there he was, standing before me: Creepy Man.

He was tall and skinny, his face and hands pale as snow, in sharp contrast to his dark butler’s uniform. He had no hair, not like he’d lost it, but like he’d never had any, and bulging green monster eyes. He looked like he had been alive for centuries. I loved him.

“We have no more candy, miss,” he said in a deep foreign accent as he peered down at me.

“Really? But you must have something. Some peanut-butter twists? A piece of toast?”

He opened the door, no further than necessary. I couldn’t see anything behind him. What did the place look like inside? How had it changed since I had snuck in four years before? And who were “we,” and did they look creepy, too? We could all be friends. I felt someone watching, looming, and I tried to step past the doorway.

“Who else lives here?” I asked boldly. “Do you have a son?”

“I don’t have any children, miss. And I’m sorry, but we don’t have a crumb left.” He started to shut the door.

“Wait!” I blurted out and blocked the door open with my shoe. I reached into my pumpkin basket and pulled out a Snickers and a spider ring. “I’d like to welcome you to the neighborhood. This is my favorite candy and my favorite Halloween treat. I hope you like them, too.”

He almost didn’t smile. But then as I placed the treats in his spidery snow-white fingers, he smiled a creaky, crackly, skinny-toothed smile. Even his bulging eyes seemed to twinkle.

“See you!” I said, dancing down the steps.

I had met the creepy man! Everyone in town could say they had gotten candy from him, but who else could say they had given him a treat?

I spun around on the front lawn and looked back at the grand Mansion. I saw a shadowy figure watching from the attic window. Was it Gothic Guy? I quickly stopped spinning and stared back, but there wasn’t anyone there, just the ruffle of a dark curtain.

I had just passed through the iron gate when a ghoulish vampire in a red Camaro drove up to the curb.

“Want a ride, little girl?” Trevor asked. Matt the Farmer sat comfortably behind the wheel.

“My mother told me not to talk to strangers,” I said, taking a difficult bite of a Mary Jane. I was not in the mood for a Trevor confrontation.

“I’m not a stranger, babe. Aren’t you too old to be trick-or-treating?”

“Aren’t you too old to be toilet-papering the town?”

Trevor got out of the car and came over to me. He looked particularly sexy. Of course, I find all vampires sexy, even fake ones.

“What are you supposed to be?” he asked.

“I’m dressed up as a freak, can’t you tell?”

He was trying to be cool but was stepping on himself. I was the only girl that had said no to him. The only girl in town he could never have. I had always been a mystery because of the way I dressed and behaved, and now I was standing before him dressed as his perfect dream girl.

“So you’re visiting Amityville by yourself?” He stared up at the Mansion. “You’re a wicked chick, aren’t you?” He glanced down, sending chills through me—he was gorgeous in his Dracula cape.

I said nothing.

“I bet you’ve never kissed a vampire before,” he said, his plastic teeth shining in the moonlight.

“Well, when you see one, let me know,” I said, and started to walk away.

He grabbed my arm.

“Give it a rest, Trevor!”

He pulled me in closer. “Well, I’ve never kissed a tennis player,” he joked.

I laughed, it was such a corny line. He kissed me full on the mouth, his plastic teeth getting in the way. And I let him. Maybe I was still dizzy from spinning on the lawn.

He finally came up for air.

“Well, now you have!” I said, pulling away. “I think Farmer Matt is waiting for you!”

“I didn’t get any candy!” he said, fingering my pumpkin basket. He pulled out a Snickers bar.

“Hey, that’s my favorite! Take a peanut-butter twist.”

He gobbled up the Snickers with his vampire teeth, which came loose and fell on the ground, dripping with chocolate and caramel. I quickly reached for them, but he grabbed my arm, spilling my candy everywhere.

“Look what you’ve done!” I shouted.

He grabbed handfuls of candy and stuffed them into his jeans. I watched as my remaining treats were strewn across the lawn. The only candy I could salvage were some boring Smarties and a smashed Mars Bar.

“Still want to be an item?” he asked, his pockets stuffed full with my night’s work as he pulled me close. “Still want to be my girlfriend?”

Suddenly he let me go and started toward the Mansion. “Now I’ll get some real candy.”

I grabbed his arm this time. Who knew what Trevor would do if he reached the door?

“Miss me already?” he asked, startled that I hadn’t run away.

“They’re out of candy.”

“Well, I’ll just see about that!”

“Their lights are off. They went to sleep.”

“This’ll wake them up.” He pulled out a can of spray paint from underneath his cape. “They definitely need someone who knows how to decorate!”

He walked on toward the Mansion. I ran after him.

“No, Trevor. Don’t!”

He pushed past me. He was going to vandalize the one thing in this town that was truly beautiful.

“No!” I cried.

He popped the lid and shook the can.

I tried to pull his arm away, but he threw me down.

“Let’s see…how about ‘Welcome to the neighborhood!’?”

“Don’t, Trevor, don’t!”

“Or ‘Vampires love company!’ I’ll sign your name.”

Not only was he going to deface their property, he was going to frame me for it. He shook the can once more. And began to spray the Mansion.

I rushed to my feet and pulled back my tennis racket. I used to play with my father, and no game was more important to win than this one. I locked my eyes on the aluminum paint-filled cylinder as if it were a ball, and smacked it as hard as I could. The can spun off into the distance, and, like my usual game, I lost my grip and the racket went flying after it. Trevor let out a yell so loud I thought the whole world would hear. I guess I had hit more than the can.

Suddenly the front door light came on, and I heard the jingle of locks being unlatched.

“We gotta get out of here!” I yelled to Trevor, who was crouching down, holding his wounded hand.

I was ready to make my escape when I felt something I had never felt before: a presence. I turned around and let out a soundless gasp, because fear had taken my breath away. I stood frozen.

There he was. Not Creepy Man. Not Mr. or Mrs. Mansion Family. But Gothic Guy, Gothic Mate, Gothic Prince. He stood before me, like a knight of night!

His long black hair lay heavy on his shoulders. His eyes were dark, deep, lovely, lonely, adoringly intelligent, dreamy. A gateway into his dark soul. He, too, stood motionless, breathing me in. His face was pale like mine and his tight black T-shirt was tucked into his black jeans, which were tucked into monster-chic punk-rock combat boots.

Normally fear is something I feel only when I know my mom’s hosting a Mary Kay party and wants to use me as a model. But we were on private property, and my curiosity to meet this strange creature was overwhelmed by my terror of being caught.

The tennis shoes really were a good choice tonight. I could hear Trevor yelling at me as he followed me in flight, “You monster! You broke my hand!”

I raced through the open gate and climbed into the waiting Camaro.

“Drive me home!” I screamed. “Now!”

Matt was startled by his unexpected passenger. He just stared at me, in silent denial.

“Drive me now! Or I’ll tell the police you were involved!”

“The police?” he blurted out. “What’s Trevor got us into now?”

I could see the angry Count Trevor running down the driveway, his cape flowing in the wind. He was almost at the gate. Gothic Guy hadn’t moved but continued to stare straight at me.

“Drive! Just drive the freakin’ car!” I screamed at the top of my lungs.

The motor started and we peeled away until the Mansion and its unusual occupants were out of view. I turned around and looked out the back window at a shouting Dracula Trevor chasing after us.

“Happy Halloween,” I said to Matt as I let out a sigh of relief.

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