Author Topic: Wainwrights and Wrongs  (Read 19787 times)

Offline Cheezey

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Wainwrights and Wrongs: Chapter 33 Part Two
« Reply #45 on: April 07, 2024, 05:20:06 PM »


While Boyd and Susan were at the spice festival, they asked Caleb to come over and babysit Blair and James.  Originally, they were going to ask Jonathan or Maaike, but he was working that night, and she had gone back to Windenburg for a few days to speak with a publisher there.  Leaving their children alone with a vampire might have seemed like an odd choice given that they were away at nighttime, but they trusted Caleb to keep Vladislaus from starting any nonsense with them.  Unlike Lilith, who they also believed would help if asked, he was not Vladislaus’ direct spawn and thus not as subject to his influence, and besides, if Vladislaus was going to stalk any of their family that night, Susan figured it would be her, anyway.  Supposedly, Blair was still too young for their kind to bother, from what the Vatores had said.  Besides, vampirism aside, Caleb was a charming and pleasant fellow, and they all liked him.

James was already in bed for the night, after a long day of toddling around and wearing himself out, but Blair was still wide awake and excited to be hanging out with a cool, nice vampire.  She knew she could not tell any of her friends about that part, even her best friend Imran, but it was still exciting.  She had a lot of questions about it.

“You’re sure you don’t mind me asking you about vampire stuff?” she asked during their late evening chess game on the patio.



“Not at all.  It’s nice to talk to someone with an open mind about it.  I’m just glad you’re not scared of me, and you trust me not to hurt you.  Because I wouldn’t.  I’m not that kind of vampire.”

“You never bite anyone without asking first.”

“Nope.  Not anymore.  Not for a long time now.”  He moved his bishop.  “Your turn.”



Blair studied the board.  “You said not for a long time.  So, you used to?”

Caleb nodded, a bit somberly.  “Every vampire does at some point, especially when they’re first turned.  It’s a hard urge to control.  But it can be controlled,” he emphasized.  “Just like human hunger.”

“But if humans get really hungry, they have to eat.”  She picked up a pawn and hesitated on her move, and then placed it.  “Otherwise, you starve to death.”

“We do, too.  But we don’t have to drink from humans.  We can hunt animals.  Just like a human doesn’t have to eat meat to survive and could be a vegetarian, we can have plasma from fish or frogs or even plasma fruit and live.”

“So, why do you, then?  Bite people, I mean?”



He put his finger on his chin as he contemplated both his answer and his next move.  “Honest answer?  Because it tastes better.  Because it’s more filling and more satisfying to the senses.  The same reason a human would rather have a big thick steak or a chocolate cake than a boring salad or a protein bar.  Our friend Vlad calls what I do ‘subsistence living’ and mocks me for it.  But he doesn’t care if he hurts anyone, either.”  He took her pawn with his.  “Your move.”

Blair frowned as she realized Caleb’s move had put her rook in jeopardy and moved it out of harm’s way, conveniently into a position where, if he did not notice, it could nab one of his knights.  “Vlad’s a jerk.  I hate him.  I wish he’d leave Mom alone and stop hurting her.”

“So do I.”  He eyed her sympathetically in the moonlight.  He could tell that Susan and Boyd had not yet told her that Vladislaus had lined her up for future dining as well.  Poor girl.  She’s so sweet.  I hope he doesn’t turn that into bitterness. He moved a bishop of his three spaces in a setup for a strategy he had in mind, and Blair grinned cheekily and took his knight on her turn.  As she hoped, he had not anticipated her strategy while plotting his own.  “Oof.  Didn’t see that one coming.  Nice.”

“Thanks!  I practice a lot.  I got a badge for chess in scouts.”

“I can see why.”



“So, can I ask another question?”  She eyed him curiously.

“Sure.”

“When was the last time you bit someone?  Without asking, I mean?”

“Five years ago.”  He paused.  “Though I’ve been trying not to for longer.  That was my last… slip.”  He lowered his eyes.  “Like I said, it’s very hard to control.  If you let yourself get too hungry, and I wasn’t as strong then.  I was younger and less disciplined.”

Blair bit her lip, as she could tell Caleb felt bad thinking about it, and she felt a bit sorry for asking.  “I know you didn’t mean to hurt them.”

“But it didn’t hurt them any less, all the same.  A lesson I try and remember when the dark urge hits.”

“What about Lilith?  She doesn’t bite people anymore either, right?  When was the last time she…?”

“No, she doesn’t.  As for her last time,” Caleb looked up at the moon, “you’d have to ask her.”  He knew it was more recent than his, significantly, but that was something he would rather not lie about or tell Blair.  He pointed out the results of his latest move on the board.  “Check, by the way.”

“Eek!”  Blair did some quick thinking and saved her king.  “Would it be okay if I asked one more thing?”



Caleb smiled kindly.  “No worries.  I’ll tell you if you’re getting too personal.”

“When did Vlad turn you two?  How old are you really?  Because you look younger than my mom and dad, but are you?”

“Hah.  I can tell you I’m old enough that the date on my driver’s license is, we’ll say, fudged.”

Blair let out a snort.  “Mom fudges about her age sometimes, too, but she can’t get away with it on her driver’s license.  But I’ve heard her say it wrong to a saleslady a couple times!”

“I’m older than them.  Let me put it this way.  I was turned in the clubs in the era when goth music was first a thing, and if you need to know what year that was, you can either look it up online or ask your parents.”  He smirked.  “And for the record, Lilith is my older sister.  By a little bit.”  He pinched his fingers for effect, and Blair giggled.

“I get the feeling I better not tell her you said that, though.”

“You could keep it between us.”

“Okay.”  Blair made a final move on the chessboard and folded her arms triumphantly.  “Oh, and checkmate!”

Caleb looked down at the board and evaluated the situation to discover she was indeed correct.  She had outmaneuvered him quite expertly.  “Good game.”  He clapped.  “I see that scouting badge is well earned.”



Life chugged along in the Wainwright household, and James kept growing and doing more by the day.  To Susan, it felt like he was learning how to make new and different messes every day, one of the ways beyond physical appearance that he seemed to take after his father.  He would not sit still long enough to be confined to the highchair for very long, and eventually, Susan gave up and just started feeding him by giving him plates of food wherever he was when he got hungry.  Especially because of how he would cry out whenever she, Boyd, or Blair would leave the room.  They hoped that his clinginess was just a phase he would outgrow.  While they loved him dearly, it was not a trait that would serve him well socially as he got older, and it needed to be nipped in the bud before it got worse.

“We worried about Blair being too introverted, but James is just ridiculous with this crying sometimes,” Susan vented to Boyd one day when he got home from work.  “I can’t even go to the bathroom without him starting to wail or trying to follow me in, let alone put him in the crib and go out to work on my engineering bench.  How am I supposed to get any work done?  If this keeps up, I’m going to have to put him back in day care and go back to the office so my performance doesn’t suffer!  I can’t very well concentrate on building fine circuitry and keep an eye on a free-roaming toddler that refuses to be confined and entertain himself at the same time.”

“Sometimes he’ll use the tablet for me.  He likes shapes,” Boyd suggested.

“Yes, for about ten minutes.  Then he gets restless.  Or hungry.  Or needs the potty.  It’s not like on the weekends when you watch him here while you’re puttering around the house when you can just put stuff down and then pick it up again if he suddenly needs something.  Take him to work on a take your kid to work day and see how much you get done.”

Boyd cringed at her tone, and he could tell he was dangerously close to getting a blast.  “The lab doesn’t do those for safety reasons, but point taken.  I’m sorry he’s not doing better about that, honey.  I’ll try to help you figure something out and work with him to try and get him a little more emotionally independent.”

“Maybe getting him his own room would help,” Blair suggested.  “He’s never alone, even when he sleeps.  That’d get him used to it.”

Susan sighed.  Ugh.  Not the room whine again.  While they both understood how much Blair wanted and needed her own space, it was not like they both were not well aware of that fact and doing their best to save for it, so her constant griping was getting rather old.  “We’d love to, sweetie, but—”

“I know, I know,” she cut her off with an overly dramatic sigh.  “You can’t afford it yet.”



“Bare!”  James thudded his empty plate on the table, blundering Blair’s name in his attempt to pronounce it.

“I’m busy, James.”

He didn’t care.  “Bare!”

“I said I’m busy.”  She hoped if she just kept at what she was doing, he would get bored and find something else to do.  She loved him, but he could get very tedious.

Unfortunately, he wasn’t having it this time.  Mommy was outside, Daddy was at work, and Big Sister was right there.  “Baaaaaaaaare!”

She looked over at him, frustrated.  He had just had a snack and juice a little while ago, so he should not have been hungry or thirsty, and she didn’t smell anything, so hopefully it wasn’t an accident.  “What?”

He looked at her wide-eyed and eager.  “Pay wiff?”  She sighed.  She did not want to be mean, but she did not feel like playing with her baby brother right now, either.

“I know you want to play, but I’m busy, like I said.”  She looked over at the television, which was playing a weather broadcast.  “How about I put cartoons on for you?  I don’t know why Mom left the dumb weather on anyway.  Of course, you’re bored.”  She was not entirely sure he understood that, but she hoped that would get him to stop pestering her.  Her mother was outside, trying to get some work done on an engineering project.  “That okay?”

He did not know how to talk well enough to say much else, but he seemed glad when the cartoons came on and settled happily into the cushions.  Blair breathed a sigh of relief and returned to her notebook.



Despite how busy they were, Susan and Boyd still did their best to teach James all the skills he needed.  Potty training was an essential one, and the sooner he was out of diapers, the better.  Not only were they messy, but they were also expensive.  Plus, using the potty on his own would be another step toward independence, and it also fulfilled his seemingly never-ending craving for attention by helping him learn.  “Good job,” Susan praised him.  “You’re learning very quickly.  I’m very proud of you.  I’m so impressed that you’ll be able to do this by yourself, soon.  That makes me and Daddy and Blair all so very happy.”  She smiled down at him.  “You’re such a big boy.”



They also used flash cards to help teach him more words and proper Simlish phrases.  He was speaking better every day, and also had a language program on his tablet, but he seemed to learn even faster when he was working one on one with them.

“Potty!” James said as he identified the card she held up.

“Very good.  That is the potty.  It’s in the bathroom.  Can you say bathroom?”

“Bafroom.”

“Bathroom,” Susan emphasized the syllable he mispronounced.  “You were very close.  Bathroom.  The potty is in the bath-room.”

“Bathhhhhroom.” “That was… closer.  We’ll keep working on it.  Good job.  Keep trying.”  She changed the card.  “We’ll have you speaking eloquently and out there making friends and playmates in no time.”  Which will hopefully be soon, she finished inwardly on a frazzled note.



Author’s Note: Sorry for the length and having to split into two posts again, but yay, James is finally a toddler! Sadly, Plum Tree is gone so I can’t update the family anymore, but as you might have guessed, he went from his staged infant trait of wiggly (since Growing Together hadn’t come out when I played that part of the save originally, I staged a couple days of infancy for the story during NaNoWriMo when I wrote this draft, and wiggly was what he rolled randomly on his first age-up) to clingy, which is how he was in the main save. Quite a change from independent loner Blair!

Offline Cheezey

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Wainwrights and Wrongs: Chapter 34
« Reply #46 on: May 19, 2024, 09:01:21 PM »
Chapter 34



While the Wainwrights went on about their lives, so did the vampires that knew them—friend, acquaintance, and whatever Vladislaus Straud was, depending on whether the perspective was from the Wainwrights’ or that of Vladislaus.  One of their regular hangouts was a club in Forgotten Hollow, an old, defunct, and deconsecrated cathedral that was now a nightclub that had become a regular den of the denizens of the dark.  Strangely, despite his broad influence in the town and proud status as the town’s oldest master vampire, Vladislaus Straud himself only showed up there periodically.  While he enjoyed the company of other vampires, he found many aspects of the modern-day club scene distasteful, especially lowbrow trashy behavior from drunk mortals that he considered the equivalent of last resort fast food.  Generally, he only went to such places to socialize with his fellow vampires, not dine.

His spawn Miss Hell was in town tonight, however, since she had messaged him that she would be there, so he stopped in.  At least the bartenders made a good Plasma Jane.  They were not vampires, but they were all in the know, and could be trusted to keep their dark secret.  Every one of them was either on the take or a pet of one of the regulars.  Lilith Vatore had literally charmed the pants of at least one.  Vladislaus personally thought she could do better, but at least unlike her brother, she was using her powers as they were meant to be used and not whining while drinking fish and frog slop like her brother.

Speaking of my little disappointments, there they are, he thought as he spotted them with Kat Cave, Markus Crow, and Miss Hell at the other end of the bar.  He picked up his newly mixed Plasma Jane and joined them.

Markus waved.  “Hey, Vlad.”

“Vladdy!  Long time no see,” Kat greeted him.  “Missed you last time you were in Bridgeport.”

“He was probably too busy stalking someone who found him odious to say hello,” Lilith quipped.

“Oh, and it’s a pleasure to see you as well, my surly little protégé,” he retorted before addressing Markus and Kat, to whom he tipped his hat in a gentlemanly manner.  “Markus, Kat.  A delight as always.  Speaking of, Kat, my dear, I hear you’ve had some wild nights of late.  I hope Caleb here has been taking notes, though I’d advise a touch more subtlety.  I’m always happy to help if you get into a fix and pull what strings I can, but Missy and I would hate to have to send such a fun one as you into hiding for too long.”  He winked before turning to Caleb, and then Miss Hell, at the far end of the bar, behind him. “Caleb, Missy.”



“Glad you could make it, Vlad.”  Miss Hell smiled.  “I’ve been catching up with Caleb and I have a very interesting tidbit to tell you.”

Caleb frowned.  “Come on.  I really wish you wouldn’t.”

“Oh, but it’s so juicy!  I just can’t help myself.”

Vlad raised an eyebrow, while Caleb’s frown deepened to a scowl.  “So, I guess lawyer-client confidentiality means plum to you?”

“Ahem.  Number one, my oath is to my client.  My client is deceased.  Any oaths I made and contracts I signed were with him.  I’m in the process of settling the estate for said client and dealing with his son, named in said contract.  I’m not sharing sensitive financial or private information about said deceased client or his wife in this conversation.  One could argue that privilege doesn’t quite apply in this context.  Especially regarding you being bent out of shape that the son of the deceased is the brother of the stalking victim of a vampire, an act that’s not exactly written in the law books and thus has no precedent.”



“I can’t believe you,” Lilith seethed, while Caleb sighed in frustration.

“Thanks.  Thanks a heap.”

The Vatores’ reactions were all Vladislaus needed to confirm what Miss Hell was saying without her even saying a name.  “So, you’ve been Jonathan Bronte’s lawyer this whole time?  And you were their father’s?”

Miss Hell blinked innocently.  “Now Vlad, you know I can’t confirm or deny who retained me.  Privilege.”

“You sure as hell admitted who you’re stalking, though,” Lilith snapped at Vladislaus.  “So maybe you should cut it out and leave the poor woman alone, for the Watcher’s sake.”

Vladislaus laughed.  “The Watcher and I haven’t had a relationship in some time, my dear, so I’m not terribly concerned about that.”

“I have it on fairly good authority that Susan doesn’t want one with you, either, so maybe you ought to consider that,” Caleb retorted.

“Yes, yes.  Your opinion has been duly noted and given all the consideration it deserves.  About as much as this.”  He dumped his empty drink in the trash.

Caleb growled under his breath, and started to say something, but stopped when Lilith stood and took his hand.  “Come on.  Let’s go get some air.  It’s gotten rather foul in here.”



Markus swirled his Plasma Jane.  “Vlad, you know I’m cool with you most of the time, but it wouldn’t hurt to ease up on Lilith and Caleb a bit.  They’re never going to embrace any of the old ways if you keep hammering them over the head with them like that.”

He side-eyed Markus.  “Hmm.  And what would you have me do, then?  Sit by and watch them embarrass vampire kind as a whole acting like fools?  Markus, my friend, you know I’ve got no problem with you most of the time.  You’re a respectable vampire and you don’t preach foolish nonsense like acting like you’re still a weak human when you’re not.  I understand that you’re fond of some mortals.  Some vampires are.  But you know the difference.  Those fools do not.  Well, Caleb doesn’t seem to.  Lilith, perhaps she’s learning.  Her idiot brother, on the other hand, needs to be whipped into shape, and she’s still insolent as well.”  He sipped his drink and eyed him sharply before continuing.  “That said, I’m also aware that Caleb recruited you in his little scheme to try and undermine me from dining on Susan Wainwright whenever I please.  I don’t know why you’ve chosen to involve yourself in that, nor do I particularly care.  So far, I’m not aware of you doing more than talking to them.  Fine.  Talk to them all you want.  Befriend them if you like.  Perhaps you might even help convince Susan to join us someday.  Her husband, too, would be welcome.  They’re intelligent and would make interesting additions to our community.  Regardless, there’s nothing you can tell them about me that I’m concerned about.  But if you cross the line and get in my way,” he warned, his eyes gleaming ominously, “I won’t take it lightly.”

“Relax.  I’m not out to make any enemies.  Out of you, or the scientists.”  He chuckled.  “But I wonder why you obsess so much about certain mortals like that.  It’s not like there aren’t a ton of others out there ripe for the biting with a lot less effort and a little finesse.”  He looked at the bartender, one of his own pets.  Filip was one of those who had an obsessive love of expensive steak and bacon, and his plasma reflected that.  Markus not only tipped him well to keep his lips sealed about their secret and for regular bites, but also paid for a monthly subscription to a gourmet food delivery service that provided him with that.  Not only did it get his confidentiality, but it also got Markus top-notch Plasma Janes and a hearty drink just before he left the club.



It was just around that point in the conversation that a very curious and famous Dirk Dreamer came over.  “So, I ordered this Plasma Jane drink that seems to be so popular and, uh… what’s in it?  Because it’s kind of…?”

“Weird?” finished Filip the bartender.

“Yeah.”  He eyed them oddly.  “I didn’t think it had actual plasma in it, but…”

“Plasma fruit, my dear boy,” Vladislaus informed him.  “It’s an acquired taste for a distinguished palate.”

“Hey, you can’t imply a celebrity here’s not distinguished,” Markus joked.  “Not cool.”

“It’s okay,” Miss Hell teased back.  “It’s just a comment on the lack of top hat.”  She tapped hers.  “You know Vlad and I are just old school.”

Dirk eyed them strangely.  “So, you acquire the taste by drinking… plasma?  Er, plasma fruit?  Well, I guess this is kind of a goth club.  Goes with the theme.”  He took his drink and wandered back out to the dance floor.



Kat raised an eyebrow as he left.  “You know that guy is all over social media, right?  Not just a celebrity, but a geeky tech celebrity genius type?  He’s going to put two and two together about us real quick, if he hasn’t already, and probably blast it all over the internet.  If he hasn’t already updated from his phone.”

They looked over.  “He’s still got the Plasma Jane in his hand and the poor thing looks mildly ill from it,” remarked Miss Hell.

“Dumb llama mortal.”  Markus chuckled.  “If it sucks, why drink it?”

Vladislaus nearly spat out his drink despite the vulgar humor.  “That’s what I tell Caleb all the time, but he never listens.”

That garnered a chuckle from all three of them before the mood grew serious again.  “Seriously, though, want me to go take care of it?  I can go put the fear of the undead into him right now.  Rare is the mortal stupid enough to speak up after a good Kat Cave style warning.”

Miss Hell looked him over and shook her head.  “No.  I think that one could do with a simple mind-wipe or charm.  I can take care of it.”  She started to stand, but Vladislaus finished his drink, set it on the bar, and stopped her.

“Not necessary.  I’ll handle him.  I’m rather peckish and that fellow had a promising scent.  I suspect he’s got a good profile.”

“And you said you never dine in places like this,” Miss Hell teased.

“Even I slum it occasionally, my dear.  Just like our four-star celebrity Mr. Dreamer.”

“Bon appétit,” she replied, while the other two watched him go, equally amused.



On his way to chase down Dirk Dreamer, Vladislaus noticed another mortal side-eying him.  He paused, and recalled that she had been beside Miss Hell ordering a drink when the Vatores were whining about her telling him about the coincidence of Susan’s brother having her handle their father’s estate.  His ancient vampire powers picked up on a sense of unease from her and he discerned that it was from Caleb and Lilith calling him a stalker.  Worse, she recognized him as the esteemed Vladislaus Straud, because they had used his name and this was his town, with his grand statue in the square.  Well, his “great-grandfather’s,” but still.

He silently cursed his spawn and grand-spawn’s petty lack of discretion.  Now he had another mess to clean up, and an entirely unnecessary one, thanks to those fools.  Not that he particularly cared what mortals thought of him, but Forgotten Hollow was his home, and he would not have mere human nobodies in the club spreading unsavory rumors about him in his hometown, where he paid his taxes and owned several politicians.

It would serve them right if I thralled her and brought her downstairs to them to feed on themselves.  Spill her blood a bit and the scent might be too much for them to resist, especially if I offer it to Kat to finish if they refuse.  She would be far less gentle on an “innocent” at my command, and Missy would gladly help force them to watch. While Miss Hell had a better relationship with Caleb than he did, as the one who turned him, she also found his and Lilith’s pity-the-mortals moralizing tedious and eye-rolling, and she also hoped he would get over it someday.

But after a moment, he decided a simple memory alteration would suffice this time.  Perhaps such a lesson could be arranged for Caleb alone in the future if this nonsense continued.  He did not want to alienate Lilith further when she was already in a foul mood when she had recently taken strides toward the darker side, and risk undoing that progress.  Why, only a few weeks ago, she let herself get a bit too hungry and slipped, he heard.  Romancing some poor mortal sap in a place like this, cozying up to him on the dance floor, taking him alone somewhere, only to find out he was more talk than action when it came to the nitty-gritty of the naughty biting part.  Apparently, she nipped him and drank a bit anyway, before her guilt overcame her hunger and stopped her.  Then, she used her powers to make him forget the details and think it was a simple accident, rationalizing to herself that’s all it was anyway.  She had not meant to.  But Vladislaus knew the truth.  She had.  All vampires meant it.  Those who didn’t, like her and Caleb, were just fools that lied to themselves.



After using his mind powers on the eavesdropper to stop her, he casually strode over.  “You heard nothing worth repeating when you saw me at the bar.  No gossip.  Just some friends talking.  You don’t even know who we are or remember what we look like.  In fact, you barely remember even being here.  Those drinks were quite strong.”

“Strong drinks,” she murmured.  “I don’t remember anything.”

“Good.  You never will.  In fact, this place was not to your taste at all.  You won’t even want to come back.”

“No.  Won’t come back.”

“Very wise.  You know that’s for the best,” he said kindly, and broke his spell to allow her to move again only after he rounded the corner and ducked out of sight.



Vladislaus did not have to wait long for the opportune moment to take care of the Dirk Dreamer problem.  After he finished his Plasma Jane, he did not pull out his phone, but decided to try and dance off the ill feeling it left him with.  It did not work, and a few minutes later, he left the dance floor and headed for the restroom.  Vladislaus shifted into dark form and pounced on Dirk the moment he was alone in a stony corridor on the way there.

“What the…?  Holy plum!”  Dirk was horrified as he saw Vladislaus like that, eyes alit with an unnatural and hungry glow, fangs bared, coming at him.  “I knew it.”  He backed up.  “I knew there were real freaking vampires here.  Oh—”

“Oh, you won’t be in any condition to tell anyone that, I’m afraid.”  Vladislaus used the full force of his powers on the frightened tech celebrity, who he could sense was terrified in that moment that he was actually going to kill him.

Now that Dirk was frozen, Vladislaus leaned toward him menacingly, so that he could see him in every bit of his evil and powerful glory.  “Do you think you’re too famous to die, Mr. Dreamer?  But tragically, young celebrities like you meet unfortunate ends in seedy places like this all the time.  Too many drinks, too many… illicit substances in the system… even brilliant ones like you not known as the ‘party animal’ types as you mortals these days call it.  Why, even sometimes it’s not unexpected that ones under pressure like you, working so hard, they burn out, they cut loose and unwind, they go too far…”  His lips curled into a smug smile, exposing more of his fangs.  “At least, that’s what the police report will say.  I should know.  I’m very influential in this town.  They don’t question my word.  What a sad end for a promising young man, and a tarnish on what would be your legacy.  No.  We wouldn’t want that, would we?”

Dirk just blinked at him, his heart pounding in terror while mentally he pleaded with Vladislaus and whatever forces were listening for his life.

“Of course, you don’t.  But since I can tell you’ve seen the grievous error of your ways in thinking that you might tell the world about what transpired here tonight, and because I respect a man of your intelligence and station, Mr. Dreamer, I believe you won’t make a very stupid choice if I allow you to survive this time.  So, I’ll give you that chance.  I suggest you be grateful and heed my warning.  You will not get a second.”



With that, Vladislaus grabbed Dirk and sank his fangs deeply into his neck.  Just like he suspected, his four-star blood was at least four-star dining, if not better.  It was not among what he considered the top tier, like poor Susan, but good enough that he was now tied with the delicious Diego Lobo on his San Myshuno list.  That was where Dirk was living and worked now, and Vladislaus would certainly be by not only to partake, but to make sure he was behaving himself.  If so much as a hint about him or encounters like this with vampires in Forgotten Hollow started showing up in his social media accounts, he would be taken care of quickly.  Miss Hell, Kat, and Markus all lived in that city, too, so there would be dark eyes on him from here on out.



“I must say, your plasma has a deliciously sweet taste to it, Mr. Dreamer.  A fine vintage.  I’ll certainly be back to see you again.”  He met Dirk’s heavily lidded eyes as he wobbled from exhaustion.  “How much and how roughly I take it depends on how well you hold up your end of the bargain.  Just remember that no matter how tasty you are, like all mortals, you are replaceable.”  He started to let him go, and then paused.  “Oh, and if you get ideas about stopping me or evading me, well, I’ll just say I’ve been doing this for a very, very long time, and you’d be far from the first bright little mortal who thought he was clever enough to do so and found out the hard way how wrong he was.”

With that, he stepped back and watched as Dirk fell and slumped over onto the hard floor, unconscious, looking rather like the stereotype of how Vladislaus described his unseemly demise might be written up if he was actually dead, and if not for the fang marks on the side of his neck.



Caleb came around the corner just in time to see Vladislaus change back into his human form over the unconscious Dirk Dreamer.

“Wow.  Did you really just chow down on Dirk Dreamer right here in the club?”  He regarded him with utter disgust.  “What about your oh-so-dignified palate and not eating in ‘trashy’ places like this?”

“A vampire that considers frog blood with fresh squeezed plasma juice and a touch of parsley a delicacy hardly has the room to make judgments on my taste.”

“I’m making a judgment on your behavior, and your hypocrisy,” he retorted contemptuously.  “I couldn’t even begin to count the times you’ve insulted me and Lilith for finding willing ‘fast food’ at the clubs, not to mention all the jabs at Missy for meeting me in one, but just earlier tonight you gave Kat plum for lack of subtlety for when she went wild on someone in public.  And then you turn around and do this to someone famous, like that’s not going to get a whole bunch of attention we don’t need.  In a club in our hometown, no less!  You’re unbelievable!”



Utterly unimpressed, Vladislaus adopted a mock expression of contrition.  “Dear me, the high and mighty Caleb Vatore doesn’t approve of what I’m doing.  Whatever shall I do and however will I sleep during the day?”  He rolled his eyes.  “Oh, that’s right.  Snugly in my coffin with my toasty bunny slippers, having sweet dreams of enjoying delicious mortal plasma while you dig in the mud for whatever it is you call food, with your hunger crying out to you in your self-inflicted misery while martyring yourself in pointless self-righteousness.”



Caleb groaned, ready to tear his hair out, which was not an unusual feeling when he dealt with Vladislaus.  “So typical of you.  So arrogant.  You don’t give a plum how what you do affects anyone else!  You just do whatever you want and rationalize it.”

“Did I hurt your feelings, dear grand-spawn?  My apologies.  But you’ve got no room to talk about arrogance when you’re preaching so much, you’d think this was still a cathedral and not a nightclub.  I’d tell you to take a hard look in the mirror if it would do any good.”

“You don’t get it!  For someone who’s so concerned about what the community thinks, why on Earth would you think biting a tech celebrity, someone who’s all over social media, wouldn’t be a huge risk?”  Caleb looked down, relieved that Dirk was still breathing and that Vladislaus had not killed him, but also anxious because of the attention he could bring to their community once he woke up.



Vladislaus straightened, highly insulted.  “Do you really think I’m foolish enough to feed on Mr. Dreamer right here in the club like this without good reason?  Then you’ve underestimated me yet again.  No wonder you can never win a spar against me.  I think that swamp slop you drink is starting to affect your intelligence, and for all of your other flaws, one thing I did not believe you were was stupid.  Naïve, misguided, and far too attached to your lost mortality, absolutely.  But stupid?  No.  Not that you deserve an explanation, but in fact, Mr. Dreamer here was a risk before I tracked him down.”

“What do you mean?”

“After you and your sister left in a huff, he came to the bar and overheard too much, asked a few too many questions, and then drank a Plasma Jane.  We knew who he was, and it was clear he was drawing conclusions.  He needed to be silenced, and our dear friend Kat was chomping at the bit for a chance at him.  Perhaps you’d have preferred I let her handle it instead?  Known for her subtlety as she is?”  He raised an eyebrow.



“No, but you could’ve just mind-wiped him.”

“This was just as effective, and besides, I was hungry.  Fear not.  I wasn’t seen, and he won’t talk.  Not if he wants to live through a second bite.”

“Vlad…”

“Don’t.”  He held up a hand.  “This conversation is over.  Don’t worry your poor little bleeding heart about Mr. Dreamer.  He’ll wake up in a little while and be just fine.  He’s a bright fellow.  Go and take him to a couch if you feel so bad for him, so his four-star behind can nap in peace.  But don’t dally too long.  After all, the poor aggrieved Wainwrights need you more, don’t they?”

Caleb sighed.  “You know, every time I think you might have a shred of decency hiding in you somewhere, you have to go and open your mouth and prove me wrong.”

“Ah, yes, dear grand-disappointment, I love you, too.  Now go on and tend to your latest injured stray like a good boy.  The night is still young, and I’m invigorated after a hearty drink.  You should try it sometime.  It’d do you good.”



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Offline Cheezey

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Wainwrights and Wrongs: Chapter 35
« Reply #47 on: September 02, 2024, 04:56:23 PM »
Chapter 35



The Wainwrights had no idea that they had been one of the topics of gossip amongst the vampires in the club that night, or even that their father’s lawyer Miss Hell and the vampire that Caleb occasionally referred to as Missy were one and the same.  Neither they nor anyone else ever found out exactly what happened to poor Dirk Dreamer, either, since he chose to heed Vladislaus’ warning, and he never talked about his experience at the club in Forgotten Hollow.  If asked by anyone who knew he went there, he just disdainfully said the drinks sucked, and the crowd was about what you’d expect in a place like that, and little else.

Although they had not forgotten about the threat of Vladislaus, they were preoccupied with the day to day matters of home, work, and family.  Susan was still trying to balance working from home to save the cost of day care for James, although it got trickier by the day.  She found that if she could get him tired enough to take longer naps, but not so overtired that his sleep schedule got disrupted, she could get more done during those.  One way she found to get him to sleep well was to load him up with the attention he was always craving by reading to him to get him to fall asleep.  It was developmentally good for children his age anyway, and he loved the stories.  Blair always had too, she recalled, and she supposed if she had not been so tired and distracted herself, she would have remembered that sooner.  Now, James looked forward to story and nap time and his little body had developed a natural readiness for that afternoon crash that gave her some much-needed peace and quiet to do the focus-heavy aspects of her work.

“Today’s story is about a little boy named Fred with a magical llama named Fuzzfoot.”  Susan showed him the cover and then opened the book.

“Fred was a funny little boy with a funny little friend…” She turned the page and kept reading, while James listened, eyelids growing heavy, but happy as he nestled into the covers.



Boyd made it a point to give James specific one-on-one time every day when he got home from work, too.  He was almost always up and energized for an hour or two after that, and Susan was burnt out from chasing him around all day.  Not that he ignored Blair, of course, but being so much older she would be up for much longer, and she was very independent.  She knew if she needed either of them, they were there for her.  Little James did not seem to have that assurance no matter how often they reassured him otherwise.  So, the first thing Boyd did after getting home and changing out of his work clothes was to sit down with him.

“Hey there.  Did you have a good day?”

“Uh-huh!”

“Mommy said you were well behaved most of it.  That’s good.  And that you learned to stack your blocks higher, too!  I’m very impressed.  That means you’re learning.”

James grinned and bounced at the praise.

“But she also said you told her no a few times when she asked you to settle down.  Now, we talked about that yesterday.  Remember?”

He just looked back at him innocently.

Boyd was not quite sure if he truly did not remember, or if their son was as bright as he suspected and pulling a fast one.  He had a feeling it was the latter, but he gave him the benefit of the doubt and treated it as a teaching moment anyway.  He met his eyes to prod his memory gently.  “We talked about how you need to listen when Mommy asks you to settle down or play with your toys gently, or not jump on the couch.  It’s important to listen and do that when Mommy or I ask.”

“Or me,” Blair interjected on a walk-by from the kitchen, grabbing a snack.

“Or your big sister,” Boyd amended.  “We can’t have you getting hurt or breaking things.”

His little face started to pout.

“Now, now.  I’m not mad.  I’m sure Mommy already punished you.  I’m just reminding you how important it is to be good, okay?”

“Kay,” he said through a distinctly sullen look.

“And you’re being pretty good now, so as long as you keep it up…”  He gave him a thumbs-up, which perked James back up a little.

“Pay wiff, Daddy?”

“Okay, we can play for a bit.”  He pulled James onto his lap and loaded a cute interactive game onto the tablet.



Blair was beyond done with sharing a room with her little brother, but she was resigned to the fact that it was not going to change anytime soon whether she liked it or not.  If she was in there doing something interesting, there was a good chance he would follow her in and watch because Big Sister was apparently fascinating!  “Well, I know I’m cooler than Mom and Dad, but seriously, what is so much fun about watching me build blocks?” she quipped as he came in and parked on his toddler bed to play with one of his toys.  “They must have something really boring on TV again.”



James just alternated between flying his little helicopter around and babbling at Blair.  “Build big blocks?”

“Yeah, I’m trying to make a castle.  It’s kind of complicated.”

“I help?”

Blair made a face.  “I think it’s too hard for you.  Lots of small pieces that have to go in exact spots.  I need to use the book.  Besides, these blocks are for bigger kids.  The pieces aren’t safe for you.  That’s why we keep them on a high shelf where you can’t reach them when no one’s around.  If you want to play, you need the toddler ones.”

“But I wanna play wiff Blair!”

“Not right now, James.  Maybe if I was doing something easier.  Just play over there with your toys on the bed for now.  But hey!  You’re getting my name right!”  She smiled at him.  “Good job!”



However, the vampire situation was not completely off the Wainwrights’ radar.  The possibility of Vladislaus returning was something both Susan and Boyd thought about often, even if they tried not to.  While Susan had resigned herself to at least a temporary disgusting deal of just letting him have a bite and going his way to make it the least miserable as possible, Boyd was still desperate to come up with something that might put a stop to Vladislaus stalking Susan, and eventually Blair, for good.  Even though he knew Susan did not want him to, and even though all the vampires told him the werewolves were more trouble than they were worth, he was convinced there had to be more to it than they were telling him.  After all, if vampires and werewolves were natural enemies, even Caleb and Lilith would have some bias, and perhaps a natural apprehension of a mortal they were chummy with knowing something that could potentially be used against them if things ever became less than friendly.  But as an open-minded scientist, he was willing to hear the wolves’ side of things from a friendly one.

So, one day while he was at work, he convinced his supervisor to let him take a day trip up to Moonwood Mill to collect samples.  It was not entirely unjustified.  Like the trip into Forgotten Hollow, there were specimens that could only be found in that region.  Lake Lunvik was ancient, and its waters were reputed to hold magical specimens and properties, although this had never been verified in any of their documentation.  It was easy enough to get a few jars of water and catch a few fish to verify that.  Moonwood Mill was also the only place the rare moonpetal plant grew naturally, and they had never been able to replicate a healthy specimen in the lab.  Culture a few cells, yes.  Keep an entire living plant or even a graft a thriving one, no.  Finding some fresh seeds or cuttings would be a nice bonus for their botany projects.  Not surprisingly, it was not a place many scientists were eager to take a trip to, either.  The town was hardly known for its five-star accommodations or welcoming hospitality.  Or even great roads for getting there.  Boyd was half surprised he didn’t blow out a tire on one of the gravel roads winding up the mountain to get there. The wolves really don’t like outsiders just dropping by, do they?

If the town had been like in the movies when a stranger walked into the small-town bar with the jukebox, he would have sworn the music stopped and all eyes were on him the second he parked his car and stepped out, even though he did not see anyone around.

It was far more rural and run-down than he imagined, too, and he was glad he had full reception on his cellphone and that his GPS worked.  He supposed werewolves and their keener senses navigated and enjoyed that wilderness, but to him it looked like exactly the kind of place that it was.  Somewhere that had an economic boom-and-bust decades ago, was now populated by only a dedicated few who refused to leave, avoided by pretty much everyone else, and that only even got high speed internet a couple of years ago.  Boyd’s technology-loving heart cringed at the thought of living like that, and he could only imagine what Susan would think.  Probably something along the lines of that she’d stayed in campgrounds better than that, and she’d hated every minute of that, too.   



That was not to say it lacked a sense of community.  Quite the opposite.  There was an active community board right by the library, where Boyd parked.  He figured that would be the place to go for information, and while he had ignored Caleb’s warning about seeing the werewolves in general, he did think it was wise to start with a public place, especially now that he was here.  If for no other reason than Moonwood Mill looked like a place that would be very easy to get lost, with rather poor road signage and even worse roads.  He was not much of a hiker, but he was not sure his sedan that did just fine as a commuter car back in Brindleton Bay could take another major whack with one of these surprise rural mountain potholes without a call for roadside assistance.  Who would probably take six hours to get there in a place like this.



Boyd was also impressed by the large statue in the town square.  The craftsmanship from old steel mill pieces was clever, and he admired it.  It was beautiful in an industrial sort of way.  Many wrote werewolves off as all feral savages.  Certainly, that seemed to be what vampires thought of them.  But aside from those who were the most far gone, weren’t they also people the rest of the time, when the moon wasn’t full?  If there were vampires like Caleb and Lilith who had humanity left in them, it stood to reason there had to be werewolves who were the same, who regretted what happened to them when the moon phase changed and tried to prevent themselves from harming innocent people.  He pondered the statue for a moment.  And, all morality aside, they came from spellcasters just like the vampires.  A frenzied feral phase under the moon aside, clearly at least some of them could retain their intellect the rest of the time, whether they were human-looking psychopaths or not.

With that not necessarily comforting thought in mind, he headed toward the library, although its run-down appearance on the outside did not do the werewolves’ reputation for being intellectual beings that appreciated and craved knowledge as much as they did raw meat any favors.



The inside of it did not, either.  In fact, it was worse.  The books they had were stacked and piled on the industrial shelving in such disorder that even he cringed, and he was far from a neat freak.  Even worse, they were not even protected from the elements, because the front door was apparently one of the only doors protecting the place from the outside elements.  He could see an open archway out to the back.  I hope they at least have the sense to put a tarp or a board over that when it rains hard or in the winter, he thought, cringing at what it must do to the books and the… the poor electronics!  Oh, Watcher.  Those poor old computers he spotted in the room beyond.  At least they had computers to look things up, even if they were at least a decade out of date, but they could at least have the decency not to let the poor things get rained on, even if those old cases were pretty sturdy.  Which made them newer than the ancient beat up, stained, and scratched rugs and furniture.  There were so many scratches everywhere, he couldn’t help but notice as he walked in…



The door had not even shut behind Boyd before the librarian stood up from the chess table and faced him.  “Can I help you?”

“Uh, hi.  I’m here to use the library.  This is the public library, right?”

“The Moonwood Mill Library, yes.  I’m Shaun Marshall, local librarian.”  He eyed him keenly.  “I can tell you’re not local.”

Boyd swallowed and tried not to be anxious with the way he was staring at him.  “What gave it away?  The car that was almost swallowed by the potholes on the way up the mountain?  I noticed most of the vehicles around here are trucks or a little more, uh, utilitarian,” he said nervously, although he suspected it was probably that he stuck out like a sore thumb as an outsider.

“Now you know why,” Shaun said wryly.  “What brings you here for research?  We don’t get a lot of that.  Not that I mind, it’s just interesting.  As you can see, we’re not exactly a modern kind of facility here.  I’m one of four locals who even went to university, one of two who didn’t drop out, and only one who came back after graduating and didn’t stick with a much better job.  I just love reading.  Language major.  But I can do my writing anywhere and still get paid.”  He looked him over and noticed his jacket with sample jars and raised an eyebrow.  “Fish and wildlife commission or game warden?”



Although Shaun the librarian seemed friendly enough, Boyd imagined that anyone, especially an intellectual sort, who would willingly come back to Moonwood Mill after getting a degree, was either a hardcore werewolf ally, probably with werewolf relatives in town, or a werewolf themselves.  Either way, the way he looked at him when he asked if he was a state representative hinted to Boyd that the werewolves did not much care for those.  He imagined not.  He doubted they had hunting licenses for what they did on rampages, and he would not be surprised if a bureaucrat or two had gone missing up here in the past after being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“No.  Nothing like that.  I’m from Future Sim Labs.”  He held up his badge to show he was telling the truth.  “We just want some biological samples for analysis.”

“What kind of samples?”  Shaun’s tone was even, not unfriendly, but not entirely unchanged, and he stared at him intently.

Plum.  I think he thinks I want something from a werewolf. Which was somewhat true, although not the way he thought.  All Boyd wanted about that was information, but he had the sense that now was not the time to ask anything like that, so he showed him some of the collection vessels in his vest.  “Water samples from Lake Lunvik.  We want to analyze it and see if it has any differences on a molecular level that grant it the properties that the old spellcaster lore claims it does.  Ideally, to establish a baseline against an eventual full moon analysis.  Also, we’re curious about the Luna fish and what information you have on it, and maybe if I get lucky, catch one, although I hear that’s something for an experienced fisherman, which I’m not.  Regardless, we have next to no literature on it, and neither does the internet, but we figured if any old fishing research texts exist, they’d be here in Moonwood Mill.  Sadly, I couldn’t confirm that from your library index online, but I still thought I’d try that before fishing in the actual lake.”



At that, Shaun let out a rueful chuckle.  “No, as you can guess, my beloved hometown is a little behind the times when it comes to such things as technology and getting things online.  We do have a phone, though, and I do answer it during the library’s hours.  I’d have been happy to send one through the mail to you guys rather than make you drive up here through pothole hell for a fishing book.  I hope you at least got some nice scenic views of our majestic mountain on the way.”

“I did,” Boyd admitted.  “This place is pretty.  Surprised you don’t get more campers.”

He laughed.  “Are you, though, Mr. Scientist?  With our reputation?  I doubt it.”

“Okay, adventurous campers,” Boyd said sheepishly.  “My name’s Boyd, by the way.  Boyd Wainwright.”

“Nice to meet you.”  They shook hands, and Shaun relaxed and continued their conversation.  “So, while I’ll be happy to navigate you to what books we’ve got on the Luna fish and the wildlife in and around Lake Lunvik, I can spare you the frustration of trying to catch one yourself today.  They’re an odd species.  They lay mostly dormant near the bottom of the lake unless it’s the full moon.  That’s when they bite.”

A lot of that around here, Boyd thought, though he knew better than to say that.  “And the moon’s not full.”  He had made sure of that before going.

“Waxing gibbous.”



Of course, he knows the moon phases by heart.  Boyd figured he might as well ask about the moonpetal as well, as he genuinely wanted samples of that and the water from Lake Lunvik.  It was not merely a cover, for he was curious, and the lab intended to analyze them.  That was why he was getting away with doing this on company time, after all.  “What about moonpetal?  Where could I find that?  I know it’s rare, so I’m assuming it doesn’t just grow wild by the side of the road.  Down by Lake Lunvik?”

“Yes, and no.  It is very rare, even around here.  As I’m sure you know, it’s a magical spell remnant, so like some of the stuff from the magic realm it’s… a weird plant.  And a lot more fragile than a lot of them.  It only grows in Moonwood Mill soil and it needs Lunvik Lake’s water, too.  Even locals here have tried growing it without much luck.  It really only does well in its home zone.  Not to say I don’t think science is amazing, so if you scientists want to try, I say go for it.  I’m all for advancements, but I don’t know how much luck you’ll have.  I don’t even think the top sages in the magic realm duplicated it there when they tried, which really rankled the mooncasters that they even tried, by the way.”  He adjusted his glasses.  “But their beef’s a little more personal because, you know, the history.  At least, I assume you do.  I’m no fool.  Any scientist coming here on field research has done at least a little research on that, I’m sure.  If for nothing else than their own protection.”  He gave him a knowing smile.  “And you did mention spellcaster lore when you first mentioned Lake Lunvik’s water, so I know you know some of it.”

“I’m aware of it, yes.  That mooncasters and vampires are both… offshoots of spellcasters, and there’s bad blood between all of them.”  He regretted the ill thought-out choice of words as soon as he said it and hoped it did not come off as offensive.



“To put it mildly, although the vampires would find that pun less amusing than I do, I bet.  As a bookworm and a language major, I always appreciate them, though.”  He met his eyes a bit more seriously, as they were still alone in the empty library.  “I’ve noticed you’ve avoided using the word ‘werewolf,’ too.  I get that, but you don’t have to worry about that with me, as I don’t consider it anything to get upset about unless you’re using it disrespectfully.  You’re probably wondering if I’m one, or who is or who isn’t.  That’s the thing.  Unlike, say, a vampire, it’s not something you’ll be able to tell easily, so be careful.  There are a lot of us in Moonwood Mill.  And yes, I did say ‘us,’” he confirmed.  “I hope this pleasant exchange means you won’t hold that against me, and I’m not about to have some scientists descend on me for some DNA samples or anything like that.  Because I’m not up for a bunch of rude privacy invasions or being treated like a lab animal, and like a certain green comic book character, you probably won’t like me if I get too angry.”

“Oh, no!  Of course not,” Boyd agreed, holding up his hand.  “We’re not like that at Future Sim Labs.  I’ve worked there for years, and I can assure you the occult research we do is all on a strictly volunteer basis.  Heck, I’ve worked side by side with a mermaid for years.  Out of respect to their identity I can’t say who, but they’ve got no complaints.  About that, anyway.  Paychecks, well…”

“Hah.  Don’t we all complain about that?  I’m sure you’re paid better than me.  And I hope they paid you mileage for this trip.”

“Yeah, though I don’t know if it’s enough to make up for the potholes.  Hopefully the samples will get me a nice bonus.  Any hints on where I could find the moonpetal?”

“Unfortunately, it only grows in that one spot I told you about.  The top Moonwood cliff.  But you can’t just hike up there from the outside.  Even with rock climbing gear, it’d be rough for an expert climber.  The only way on foot up there is through a tunnel and,” he looked him over, “I don’t recommend you, an outsider, going into any dark tunnels alone around here.  And by not alone I mean not without a local guide.”

“Too easy to get lost?” Boyd guessed.

“Or worse.”

“Slip, fall, die, and never be found again?”

“Not that tunnel, though if you went into the wrong mining tunnel, maybe.  No.  I’d worry more about who might be chilling out in there, if you get my meaning.”

Boyd cleared his throat.  “I do, uh, have a freeze ray in my car.”



“While that would no doubt be a fantastic sight to witness, and there is at least one individual I can think of who could certainly use a good cooling-off period, so to speak, I fear for what would be left of you and how much you would suffer if you missed, or if it didn’t work and he got hold of you.”  Shaun patted Boyd on the shoulder.  “So please, friend, don’t do that.  Please don’t do that.  Hit a werewolf with that and you’re going to make them very upset if it doesn’t work as intended.”  He chuckled.  “Though like I said, I’d love to see you demonstrate that thing on something else, if you don’t mind.  It sounds amazing!”

“Sure.  Got a soda or a water bottle you need insta-chilled?  It’s great for that.”

“Awesome.”



“So, any idea where I might find a reliable guide?” Boyd asked hopefully.

“If you’re asking me, I’ve got to stay here all day.  Sorry.  Otherwise, I’d be happy to show you,” he replied, just as a local teenager walked in.

Boyd paused for a moment, then decided to go ahead and ask something else he wondered about.  “What about Lily Zhu?  Do you know where I can find her?  I’ve heard she might be someone I could talk to around here.”

Although the kid who came in went into the other room to use one of the ancient computers, he could feel him staring at him anyway.  I must really stick out like a sore non-werewolf paw, he thought, while Shaun answered.

“You did?”

“I know someone who knew her a long time ago.”

“Hmm.  Must’ve been a while.  She hasn’t left town much in a real long time, from what I know of her.  But you can usually find her over at the Volkov place, where she lives, or near the gardens by the Collective tree.  Both are over across the river that way.”  He gestured in the general direction.  “Neither will be on a map or GPS, but the gardens will be easy enough to spot from the road.  There’s a set of monkey bars and bunch of garden plots right by the road after you cross the bridge, and a huge tree.  Can’t miss it.  Volkov’s place is the first big house right after it.  But it’s the opposite direction across the bridge you’ll want to go if you want to hit Lake Lunvik for your samples.  For that, you’ll want to head down the river that way, but you’ll have to walk a bit.  You can’t take your car lakeside.”

“Thanks.  I appreciate it.”



“No problem.  Just remember what I said about the tunnels.  They’re not safe, especially around the time the moonpetal is blooming.  If you really want to see the cliff and can’t find anyone to take you, and you need moonpetal samples, you can give me your contact info before you leave, and I’ll meet up with you at the edge of town to escort you there and get you some fresh samples at the next full moon.  I’m curious about what you might be able to do with it.  I’d rather handle it that way than see you or any other innocent scientists get hurt.”

“Oh, you mean by trying to go myself on the full moon?  No, I know better than that.”

“Good.”

“But I was thinking I’d still like to go and see the area itself today.  Get some soil samples, maybe some clippings of the plant—”

“If you find Lily and she takes you up there, great, but if not, again, let me know.  I can get that for you sooner if you leave me with a list of what you want.  The tunnel really isn’t a good idea.  You shouldn’t risk it,” he emphasized.  “We’ve got some books back in the wildlife section that have information about moonpetal if you want them, though.”  He pointed to the back room where the computers were.  “Back where Luna fish books are.  Middle shelf.”

“All right.  Thanks.  You’ve been a huge help.  Go grab a not-so-cold drink and I’ll give you that demo of the freeze ray, as promised, and I’ll go find what I need and be on my way.”

“Can’t wait!”  Shaun started for the door, then paused.  “Oh, one more thing while you’re down near the lake.  This is really important.  If you see any sign of Greg, just go the other way.  Don’t mess with him.  Don’t try to talk to him.  Don’t try to engage in any way.  Just don’t.”

That’s the third warning about Greg now.  Having heard it from three independent sources, Boyd could not help but be immensely curious.  “Okay.  Can I ask…?”

“To make a long story short, he’s a very old, very powerful, very angry, and very bitter immortal werewolf that’s a veritable fountain of rage and fury and perpetually in beast form these days.  He hates everyone and everything with a passion.  Other werewolves, vampires, humans, spellcasters, everything that’s happy, because he’s not.  He’s angry at life because he lost his fated mate ages ago and can’t cope, and he’s marinated in that bitterness and rage ever since.  Takes it out on the world.  There’s no reaching a soul that lost.  Many have tried.  Many ended up dead.  Others wound up alive and scarred and changed into werewolves that he now hates, too.”

“Wow.”

“So, like I said, do yourself a favor and just stay away.  I’d hate to see you mauled just for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.  It’s happened before, too many times, and he lives down by Lake Lunvik.”

Boyd nodded.  “Gotcha.  I’ll be careful.”  And keep my freeze ray handy.



Author’s Note: Sorry for the time between updates! I’ve been really busy this summer. I’ve hardly even had time to play the latest expansion, although what I have done with it, I’ve enjoyed so far, despite the few typical EA glitches and goofiness I’ve seen, which, let’s face it, is to be expected. Regardless, I’ll try to get more of this up soon, and if you’re still reading, thanks for sticking with me, and I hope you’re still enjoying it.