Aurora Sky: Vampire Hunter Read online




  Aurora Sky

  Vampire Hunter

  Vol. 1, Transfusion

  By Nikki Jefford

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, or the author has used them fictitiously.

  Copyright © 2012 Nikki Jefford

  All rights reserved

  www.NikkiJefford.com

  Cover Design: Najla Qamber

  Copy Editors: Christine LePorte and S.M. Boyce

  For Sébastien, till the end of time.

  Table of Contents

  Life Ends On A Curse

  Terms of Revival

  Team Fane

  Holiday Blues

  Vampire Blood

  Initiation

  Resolutions

  The Mouseketeers

  Winter Ball

  No Turning Back

  Fight

  The Ultimate Baddie

  Suspension

  Mission North

  Drink Of Death

  Battle Wounds

  Some Like It Red

  Call Of The Wild

  Romance Is Dead

  Code Red

  Love Bites

  Interrogation

  Transfer

  Champagne And Blood

  Catch And Release

  Cravings

  About the Author

  1

  Life Ends On A Curse

  I was outnumbered six to one… at least that’s how it felt.

  My supposed teammates stood by uselessly as the volleyball hurtled over the net and whopped me in the shoulder.

  The beautiful Brooke Harris high fived the boy beside her before switching corners. It didn’t matter if she served from the right or the left. The ball flew at me—again.

  I ground my teeth together and tried to pelt the ball back, but launched it into the net instead. God, I sucked at team sports.

  “Come on, Aurora!” Clayton Wilcox snapped beside me.

  I grimaced. A junior the size of Napoleon shouldn’t be speaking to a senior that way, but that was just my opinion.

  One of my teammates bent down for the ball and tossed it back to Brooke, who smiled as though auditioning for a teeth whitening ad. Brooke served again, and the volleyball sailed over the net once more—toward me, of course.

  Clayton’s patience had apparently worn out. He stepped in and bumped into me, but managed to smack the ball back. Fine. Whatever. My teammates should get in the game.

  Behind Brooke and her team of Olympians the bleacher crowd slouched against the benches like sloths while the rest of us got wrist burns. I’d tried everything from flu symptoms to a twisted ankle to get out of participating, but Mr. Mooney saw me as an active member of the student body, unlike the loafers who regularly got out of gym.

  Fane Donado and Valerie Ward, the reigning king and queen of gym exemption, seemed to believe that making out substituted for physical ed.

  Valerie was gorgeous, in a classical sixteenth century courtesan sort of way. Curves graced her hips and hair, which fell in thick waves of strawberry-brown down her back.

  Fane had The Worst Hair: ink black and buzzed on the sides with a mass of blond on top. Combing it back was a big mistake. It drew further attention to his long forehead and wide set eyes. He had one of those disastrous looks that captured my attention—like Edward Scissorhands.

  Every day Fane dressed in head to toe black and a long leather jacket which he wore at all times, like a second skin. Maybe he was packing…or dealing. Neither would surprise me.

  I usually had a thing for tall, skinny guys, but I made exceptions, especially when the guy in question had trouble keeping his tongue inside his own mouth.

  I wanted my first kiss to be a pleasant experience, not pornographic.

  Mr. Mooney’s whistle announced the end of gym at the same time Brooke slammed the ball over. This one hit me in the chest.

  “Ow!”

  I know guys are sensitive between the legs, but a woman’s breasts aren’t exactly made out of sponge cake.

  My classmates pattered across the gym floor toward the locker rooms. The bleacher crowd rose slowly and stretched their arms.

  Yeah, try not to exert yourselves or anything.

  I leaned down for the volleyball and walked it over to the roll out cart. As I nestled the ball into place, three more toppled off and rolled in opposite directions.

  Groan. I spent enough time chasing balls around during gym, never mind running after them when I needed to change and book it to Algebra II.

  By the time I retrieved each ball and set them on the cart, everyone had cleared out of the locker room, leaving hairspray fumes in their wake. Gag. My hair tumbled down my back as I freed it from its ponytail.

  As I yanked the zipper up my jeans I heard a snicker and stopped. All was quiet and then I heard it again. Resisting the urge to call out a feeble “Hello?” I finished securing my pants then rounded a wall of lockers.

  Valerie straddled Fane on the locker room bench in her corset top and black lace-up boots. Her arms circled his neck.

  As she leaned back to look at me, Fane’s face emerged.

  I would not blush. Not in front of Fane Donado. Too late. My cheeks flamed rouge.

  From this close up I could see that among Fane’s aforementioned defects, his lips were mismatched; the top one smaller than the bottom.

  Those lips curled back as Fane took note of my presence. I swear I heard him make a sound of disgust from deep within his throat, like I’d crashed a private party or barged into their hotel suite.

  I stood staring like an idiot waiting to be dismissed.

  When our eyes met, Fane smiled. Not a friendly ‘hello’ smile or the cute ‘you caught me in the act’ kind. Eyes locked on mine, Fane ran the tip of his tongue along his upper lip.

  The lewd gesture made me feel somehow involved in their foreplay.

  My mouth went dry.

  Fane cocked a dark brow. “See something interesting?”

  I should have squared my shoulders and informed him, “No, not at all” or “Yeah, I find it interesting that there’s a boy in the girls’ locker room. So you had that sex operation, did you?”

  Instead, I turned and fled.

  I didn’t have time for comebacks. That’s all.

  If I hurried maybe I could still catch my friend Denise at our hall lockers before she left for math.

  As I speed walked toward my locker, a football whooshed across the hall, barely missing my shoulder. Again? I glared at the boy who had chucked it to his friend. He laughed and said, “Whoops.”

  God, I couldn’t wait to graduate and get the hell out of Alaska and Denali High School.

  Sure enough, when I reached my locker, Denise had long since departed. I did a quick book and binder grab, then sprinted to math. The warning bell rang as I hurried in and took my seat beside my friend. She already had her book open and pencil in motion on notepaper.

  Denise used to laugh at my gym recaps. Now she didn’t even inquire after my lateness and here I was dying to tell her about the sex show in the locker room. Okay, not exactly a sex show, but practically!

  “Hey, Denise,” I said. “You’ll never believe what happed after gym.”

  Denise’s eyes narrowed as though I had interrupted her in the middle of a pop quiz.

  I hesitated for a second. Then the words tumbled out. “Remember that guy I told you about in gym…”

  Denise stopped me before I could go any further. “Can this wait till lunch?”

  Suddenly I felt stupid with my mouth hanging half open seeing as my closest friend pretty much told me to shut up.

  All part of Denise’s new attitude “un-makeover
” starting the day Notre Dame accepted me while her own first choice college, Carleton, had turned her down.

  She wasn’t the only student at Denali High with senioritis.

  Mom warned me this would happen. Friends began focusing on finishing senior year and imagining their lives in that great place beyond: College.

  Guilty as charged.

  If it were up to me, I wouldn’t be puzzling over an algebra graph, I’d already be enrolled at Notre Dame, set up in my dorm, attending class.

  That’s the thing about universities—they wanted you to finish high school first.

  After eighteen years in Anchorage I could hardly wait to trade in snow and cold for civilization.

  Till then, six more months before graduation.

  At the end of the hour, Denise said an abrupt, “See you at lunch.”

  Well, she could forget about juicy details ’cause I wasn’t dishing. Bitchy behavior deserved no rewards. Maybe Tracey Rowen in third period French would appreciate the story.

  At least I wasn’t running late for French because in about three seconds, Scott Stevens would pass me in the hall.

  Speaking of juicy delights.

  I swore he moved in slow motion when he rounded the corner.

  Scott had the thin, towering build going for him. He didn’t wear a letterman jacket, which he could have as captain of the basketball team, but Scott was the kind of guy who had his own killer style. Best of all, he looked me in the eyes and smiled whenever he saw me. And that is why I, Aurora Sky, for the first time in my life, had a major crush on a jock.

  Too bad he and Emily Horton were an item.

  “Hi, Aurora.”

  “Hey, Scott.”

  After he passed, I ducked into the girl’s bathroom at the end of the hall. A group of juniors huddled together and leaned into the mirror as they applied makeup. They’d all dyed their hair jet black with varying streaks of colors, as if to help tell each other apart. One had blond streaks, one red, and another blue.

  The girls moved several inches to give me room. When I looked in the mirror, I tried to recreate the same smile I’d flashed Scott. My lips curved over a set of straight teeth. I pulled my hair over my shoulders. That would have looked better, but I always pushed it out of the way.

  The group beside me finished their faces and lips. The girl with the blue streaks rubbed concealer with two fingers over a massive hickey on her neck.

  As I headed out, the warning bell rang.

  At the end of the day, Denise started spinning the combo on her locker at the same time as me. I got distracted and had to start over.

  Once she had her coat on, Denise shut her locker with a thud.

  “See you later,” she said, hoisting her backpack over one shoulder

  So now she couldn’t wait to walk out to our cars together?

  Okay then.

  I zipped up my jacket a minute later and headed for the student parking lot alone. The moisture on my lashes froze as soon as I stepped outside. Exhaust from idling cars hovered in the stagnant air. Not only was this time of year cold and dark, it turned my stomach inside out.

  Once the car stuttered to life, I smacked my mittens together to keep from freezing solid and let the vents do their work unthawing the windshield. After the ice turned to droplets, I swiped the windshield with the wipers. They carved a porthole into the glass and grated against the coarse outer layers of ice.

  The roads hadn’t thawed, not even with the blast of exhaust pipes and friction of tires running across the polished ice all day. Tires spun in the parking lot. The truck in front of me gunned it and slid sideways onto the road.

  College couldn’t come soon enough.

  I turned the radio on and sung along softly to the lyrics as I passed mounds of snow that had melted during a warm spell the previous week. This week they’d refrozen into white misshapen humps over the landscape.

  My tires skid at the first red stoplight. I slid forward four inches. Getting started again took a moment. Too much gas and my tires spun in place.

  Once I lived on campus at Notre Dame there would be no more playing slip and slide on the streets. I planned to walk everywhere on solid pavement.

  I passed the fast food chains lining the road just blocks from Denali High. On the long straight stretch home I drove on autopilot until business centers turned to neighborhoods. Small gaps of forest arched over the sides of the road. I was almost home when I took the sharpest curve on Jewel Lake Road.

  As I rounded the corner a SUV appeared in front of me, speeding around the bend. The car made a horrible skidding sound before sliding into my lane.

  Time inched forward.

  Tires screeched. I braked, but the car slid out from under me. Light glinted off the SUV’s front windshield, and for a moment, I saw the driver—a boy wearing a blue bandana around his forehead. Maybe I would have found him cute if he weren’t about to kill us both.

  In seconds, he would hit me. And I couldn’t do anything. I couldn’t brake. I couldn’t dodge him. This was it.

  I saw the boy’s face. I read his lips. “Oh, shit.”

  We said the words together.

  In the event of a catastrophe, one thing is sure. Your life ends on a curse.

  2

  Terms of Revival

  Sound returned first. A gurney trundled over the floor. Parchment fluttered. The scratch of pen on paper thundered in my ear, as though someone held a microphone to the tip as they wrote.

  Later I heard voices and a horrible metallic scraping. Even with eyes closed the lights glared. The brightness penetrated my eyelids straight to the space in front of my brain. Static pinpricks of light moved inside my forehead.

  They wheeled something over. It got closer and closer.

  A smooth voice said, “Find me the moment she starts to come around.”

  Then sound left the room like fire sucking oxygen from a burning building. For a while there was nothing, not even the static in my mind. And then the first traces of feeling returned.

  Blood rushed through my veins. My heart began a steady pump. My eyes fluttered. I balled my toes up and released them. The thin bones in my hand moved under my skin like hammers connected to piano keys as my fingers twitched over the sheet.

  “How are you feeling, Aurora?”

  I lowered my chin and got my first glimpse of the face behind the voice. He was a young man, cleanly shaven, wearing a gray suit.

  When our eyes met he smiled. “I am Agent Melcher. Welcome back.”

  My voice croaked the moment I opened my mouth. “Where am I?”

  “You’re on Elmendorf Air Force Base and this…” Melcher said looking around the bright enclosure “is our unit’s own private ER.”

  It made sense that I would be in a hospital, but why on base? My family had no ties to the armed forces. Dad was out of the country surveying, but where was Mom?

  “What happened?”

  “You were in a car accident. Do you remember?”

  Of course I remembered. How could I ever forget the last seconds of my life? Or what I thought were the last seconds.

  “The other driver…” I couldn’t finish the sentence.

  “Is gone,” Melcher answered.

  Suddenly the steady smile on his lips was too much. I looked at the door beyond his shoulder.

  “Don’t worry, Aurora. We’ve taken care of everything—the surgery and organ transplants. Thanks to the blood transfusion we performed your bones are healing quickly. You’ll be better than new in no time.”

  The smile in his voice made me distrust him at once.

  “Why am I here?”

  “Because you have very special blood, Aurora.”

  No one ever referred to my blood as special. Doctors called it unique and rare —the rarest of all blood types. Less than one percent of the population had AB negative blood. Maybe that’s why I was on base. Maybe the government had the only supply of AB negative for my blood transfusion. But why would they help me?r />
  I looked at Melcher for further explanation, but he kept smiling and said, “I’ll send in your mother now.”

  Melcher’s calm, calculating tone was replaced by my Mom’s own hysterical outburst as she flew into the room. “Oh, my God! Aurora! Thank God! Thank God!” She grasped me by the shoulders and lowered herself over my chest, pressing me into the bed. She pulled back. Tears streaked her cheeks. “Thank God,” she said again. “My baby. It’s a miracle.”

  She dabbed at her eyes with a tissue. “How are you feeling?”

  I squinted at her. “Why am I on base?”

  Mom’s face screwed up funny and it looked like she might start crying again. Then she took a deep breath and returned to patting my hand.

  “You look like you’re feeling much better,” she answered for me. “Agent Melcher said I can take you home in another week.”

  The agent, not the doctor.

  “How long have I been here?”

  “Two weeks…”

  “Two weeks!” I cried.

  Tears started pooling in Mom’s eyes once more. “They had to put you in a medically induced coma.”

  My eyes darted around the room frantically looking for a clock or a calendar —a window even. “What month is it?”

  Mom hesitated before answering, “December.”

  “But my exams. My assignments.”

  Notre Dame might have accepted me, but that didn’t mean jack if I didn’t graduate.

  “I spoke to all your teachers and they’re giving you extensions. You’ll be able to go to school the week before Christmas then use the holiday break to catch up.”

  Mom placed a hand on my face. “Don’t worry. Just rest and we’ll get you home.”

  My stomach twisted into knots. Going home meant getting in a car and I was never getting into another moving vehicle as long as I lived.

  I’d just have to walk back —all fourteen miles.

  A young man in a white lab coat and crew cut burst into my room early the next morning. I pulled my bed sheet instinctively against my chest.