Happy 5th BOOKVERSARY to The Choice!

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I’ve got exciting news for The Faction Duology, and the bookversary for book 2, The Choice, seems like the perfect time to share that with you. I’ve come to the conclusion that Albert and Phillip/Neil’s story has run its course, and if/when I ever get around to writing The Journey, the third book I’d been thinking about for this universe, it will feature a different couple.

So, because of that, and the fact books 1 and 2 together truly turned out to be more of a “duololgy” than two completely different stories featuring the same couple, JMS Books will be bundling them into a single box set in March!

Meanwhile, read on to learn more about The Choice!


BLURB ~ The Choice

As a freshly turned vampire, Neil had frozen in panic when he’d found himself face-to-face with his ex-boyfriend, Cameron. Neil thought that misstep and its associated danger was all in the past, but Cameron’s current boyfriend, Dennis, is like a dog with a bone, and a keen imagination. When the two men’s curiosity progresses to the point the vampires consider their secrecy to be endangered, choices must be made.

Now that faction-leader Albert has a blood-mate, he finds himself second-guessing his decisions. Neil would be crushed knowing his mistake led to human deaths, but Albert shouldn’t factor that into the difficult choices he must make. Will Albert’s indecision put the entire vampire establishment in danger? Or is redemption only a flamethrower away?


Links – The Faction Duology

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EXCERPT ~ The Choice

Albert Manlii tilted his head and closed his eyes in concentration, zeroing in on two particular voices among the many sounds flooding in from all directions. His heart tightened as the two humans spoke in low tones, hatching a scheme that had no hope of success, but nonetheless posed a grave danger to the vampires.

Albert stood in the stairwell, a level down from the apartment that two senior members of the vampire faction’s security team had been monitoring. By “senior,” he meant older in vampire years—which didn’t correlate with apparent years for any but the most recently turned. Point being, their hearing was far more acute than that of junior vamps, let alone humans, and walls as unsubstantial as those in typical apartment buildings such as this were no deterrent.

“What’s your impression, boss?” Ivan murmured.

Melody lifted a brow as she awaited Albert’s verdict.

“Have they mentioned their theory to anyone else?” Albert whispered.

“Not yet.” Melody shook her head.

She didn’t emphasize the word “yet,” but the importance was clearly implied, or they wouldn’t have summoned him for the added impact of listening for himself rather than simply informing him at the progress meeting scheduled for later that afternoon.

Months ago, Albert’s blood-mate, Neil, had run into his ex-boyfriend, Cameron—one of the two humans the vamps were listening to—on Neil’s very first day out on his own as a recently turned vampire. He’d faltered, which wasn’t entirely unexpected under the circumstances, and let down his guard long enough for Cameron to look past all the superficial changes that had been made to overhaul the façade of Neil’s identity—everything from his physical appearance and style choices, to a regional accent, and even a signature scent—so a casual observer would indeed see him as Neil, and not Phillip, as he’d been known as a human.

“Has anything shown up on text or email between them?” Albert asked. They had the means of wiping that kind of trail, but it would be better to put an end to the risk before it went that far.

“Not yet.” Ivan echoed Melody’s reply.

Albert closed his eyes and sighed. Yet. They both seemed to think it was important to underscore that point. Almost as if they questioned his judgment under the circumstances. They needn’t worry. He knew enough to pass the decision to the appropriate team leader—in this case, it would be the head of the security team—if he felt his own reasoning would be skewed by concern for Neil.

Albert glanced at Ivan. “Has Eunice listened to them and given an opinion?” Eunice was Ivan’s blood-mate, a trained psychologist, and excellent at reading people. Her thoughts on this were critical to the final ruling.

“Yes, she thinks that between them, Cameron and Dennis have convinced each other the existence of vampires is a very real possibility.” Which was what Albert had expected Ivan to say.

Dennis wouldn’t otherwise have given more than a passing thought to Cameron’s ex, but the man was obsessed with the topic of vampires. If there was a popular book, television show, or movie featuring them, he’d read or watched it, and quite a few of the more obscure ones, too.

Ever since Cameron had mentioned having seen an uncanny doppelganger of his deceased former boyfriend, Dennis had latched onto the supposition that Neil was a vampire, as if he wanted it to be true. Like he wanted to be the one to prove the legends really were based in truth.

While initially reluctant, Cameron had been drawn in by Dennis’s fervor and lines of reasoning. The fact the targets hadn’t mentioned their belief to anyone else wasn’t so much a sign that they didn’t take it seriously, but that they understood how crazy it would sound and weren’t prepared to air it.

Yet.

Maybe they never would, but could the faction take that risk?


BONUS SCENES for The Faction Duology

Click to expand the accordions…

🔽 🔼 POV Switch for The Recruit ~ Park Scene from Albert’s POV

Albert sat on the park bench, staring into the distance. On the other side of the walking path lay a grassy clearing where two members of his faction’s security team were playing Frisbee, but he didn’t want to appear to be looking at, let alone appear to be with them. Nor did he want to appear to be with Eunice, who sat on a bench farther down the path, reading. Or seemingly so. Perhaps she really was.

A couple more members from the security team were farther up the path, ostensibly bird watching. Beyond them sat a water fountain. When…no…if—Albert shook his head. No. He set his jaw decisively. When he received the alert that Phillip Brewer had turned down the path they expected him to take, Albert would casually walk to the water fountain, feign taking a drink, then stroll back, timing his arrival at this same bench to correlate with Phillip’s.

He pulled out his phone and flipped through screens so to the casual observer he would appear to have a purpose for sitting on the bench. Never mind that it also gave his fingers something to do as he anxiously awaited the next update.

Even with as many recruits as he’d approached in recent centuries since the vampires had organized, he’d never felt so edgy. So uneasy. Almost panicky to the point where he’d discussed it with Eunice. In the end, she’d agreed he was still the most likely to facilitate a positive outcome.

A blood-mate, finally, after two thousand years on his own. Albert closed his eyes and sucked in a lungful of the fresh, late spring air. Many of the petals had fallen from the flowering trees, so the air wasn’t as overpoweringly fragrant as it had been just weeks ago.

Yes, a blood-mate. While Albert wasn’t one hundred percent sure on a conscious level if that was the case, he felt it in his bones. Phillip was still human, and the full potency of the blood-mate connection wouldn’t be felt unless…until Phillip was changed into a vampire.

Until…he had to focus on that word. Phillip had left his apartment almost twenty minutes ago. Considering his current physical state, the fact he’d gone out at all was a positive sign. They hadn’t been sure that he would go out today…or ever again. Some of the sounds vamp agents had reported coming from the apartment had been concerning.

Albert knew Phillip was headed toward the park as of the report from ten minutes ago. No report since then meant that status hadn’t changed. It all boiled down to which path he’d take once he arrived at the park.

The wind’s direction changed, and Albert’s eyes popped open again when he caught a whiff of that scent that had so tantalized him just the other day. The sound of Eunice’s book thudding to the path reached Albert’s ears a moment later, and he stiffened, waiting for the word that would follow.

“Whoops,” Eunice muttered, and Albert smiled and stood. “Damn” would have been bad, but “whoops” was good. It meant Phillip had turned down their path. She wouldn’t be able to see him yet; she was just passing on what she’d heard.

Albert strolled to the water fountain and dropped his phone as he leaned down for the pretense of taking a drink. He wasn’t signaling anything to his people, not intentionally anyway. He supposed he was effectively signaling his intense nervousness, though.

He straightened his back and shoulders. Those nerves were something he needed to get under control. A calm demeanor was essential. “Fate,” if there was such a thing, had done its part getting Phillip to take his usual path. The rest was up to Albert.

Whether Albert got his blood-mate—a shudder rippled through him—or had to give the signal to have Phillip painlessly taken down if he refused the offer, it was in his own hands. He could blame nobody except himself if the mission failed now.

He turned to look down the path. Phillip was now in sight, and Albert strolled nonchalantly back toward the bench that his security team had chosen for many reasons ranging from its lack of security cameras and general seclusion from the street, while being in a part of the park that didn’t get overmuch foot traffic at this time of day (although they could thank Phillip’s routine for that) but still had nearby spaces where agents could be stationed without looking out of place.

As Phillip passed Eunice, she glanced up at him and nodded with a quirk of a smile. Phillip returned the gesture. Albert’s own lips reflexively twitched up at the sight. The breeze carried a heavier dose of Phillip’s scent, and this time it worked to calm Albert’s worries.

Phillip glanced around, noticing Albert, the frisbee players, and the bird watchers. He blinked a couple times before his gaze moved back to Albert as they jointly reached the bench.

“Hello,” Albert said. He came to a halt in front of the bench. “Beautiful day, isn’t it?”

Recognition flashed in Phillips eyes. He must remember their brief meeting—passing, really—on the street the other day. That was a good sign—that Albert had made enough of an impression on Phillip to be remembered.

Phillip also halted. “Sure is.” He added a light, wry smile. The man should have been in the prime of his life but was instead going through the motions of his final weeks, and he knew it. There wasn’t much for him to truly smile about, and it said a lot that he was trying to find reasons to.

Albert moved to the bench and raised a brow in what he hoped was a welcoming fashion, silently inviting Phillip to join him. This was the first hurdle that needed to be passed. If Phillip declined to even sit…well, they had alternative plans, but those weren’t as likely to work.

Getting Phillip to join him here was critical, and not coming across as an edgy creeper with an ulterior motive was essential to making that happen. Phillip shrugged, and some of the heaviness lifted off Albert’s shoulders.

“My name’s Albert.” He held out a hand, and Phillip shook it.

Phillip’s hand was warm and dry. “Phillip.” He didn’t elaborate, but Albert didn’t expect him to.

“I’m pleased to meet you, Phillip.” Albert paused. He hadn’t forgotten what he’d planned to say, of course. Or rather, the long list of options that varied depending upon the situation, or the personality of the person he was facing. But, part of what made it fairly easy to come across as natural during these discussions was the fact that much of the conversation did end up being customized on the fly while reading the expressions on his companion’s face.

“Likewise.” Phillip once again kept his reply simple. His countenance indicated he’d perceived there was a purpose to Albert’s waylaying him, but he proceeded to the bench seeming curious but unconcerned.

Which was basically perfect. Small talk wouldn’t be necessary here, and would, in fact, likely make Phillip uneasy.

So, Albert looked directly into Phillip’s eyes with a steady gaze and cut to the chase. “Phillip, I want to show you something, and I ask that you keep an open mind and hear me out before reacting.”

Phillip sat back and was easy to read. Albert had certainly caught his attention, but he still gave off no airs of anxiety. People at that stage of their life usually didn’t. What did he have to lose by hearing what Albert had to say, or watching what he had to demonstrate? Worst case scenario, a couple weeks of his life, but the nearby reader, Frisbee players, and bird watchers would likely put him at ease.

“I think we can help each other,” Albert continued.

“I’m dying,” Phillip said. Which, of course, was obvious, but Albert could certainly see how his statement might lead Phillip to think he didn’t realize that. “Whatever you have in mind, I’m sorry, but I won’t be able to make a deal with you.”

“Please, hear me out.” Albert held out an arm. Best to regain Phillip’s attention with a visual and tactile demonstration. If Phillip was feeling any pull at all due to the possibly impending blood-mate connection, his illness was weakening his ability to recognize it, or maybe to care about it, figuring it was pointless. “This seems like an unusual request, I know, but I’d like you to examine my arm. Go ahead and touch it. I want you to assure yourself that it is, indeed, my real arm and not any kind of advanced prosthetic or makeup designed to create a special effect.”

Phillip’s eyes widened, but not, thankfully, with alarm. With curiosity. Possibly the best diversion he’d had in a while, dealing with his illness.

Albert left his arm hanging in the air while Phillip briefly paused before putting both hands on Albert’s forearm. As expected, based upon the vampires’ background check, Phillip was thorough in his exploration. He would trust his senses, but he would be systematic and meticulous to make sure his senses weren’t being tricked as if by a professional street magician.

Phillip felt for a pulse and found one. It took nerves of steel not to react as Phillip ran a hand over the hairs on Albert’s arm, watching them move appropriately. He manipulated Albert’s arm and fingers, carefully observing the play of muscle and the movement of tendons at the inside of his wrist. He even pinched Albert’s skin.

When Phillip withdrew his hands, Albert lowered his arm. “Are you satisfied that this is indeed my natural arm?”

“Yes.” Phillip eyed him warily.

“Remember, keep an open mind and maintain your composure. Give me the opportunity to explain what you’re about to see.”

Phillip narrowed his eyes, but they still conveyed a mood of curiosity rather than concern. “All right.”

Albert took a quick glance around, then quickly checked himself. Damn his nerves. He shouldn’t have given Phillip that visual clue, because the man was too smart not to pick up on it.

Nobody was in sight other than his own people. He hadn’t expected to see anyone else, because he would have received an audible alert if anyone was heading down the path. But, at least the coast was clear to proceed. Thankfully, because at this point a delay in the action could have seriously disrupted Phillip’s acquiescent mood. Either nobody was about, or his team members at the split were successfully diverting anyone who appeared to want to come this way.

Moving quickly, before Phillip could react, he pulled a small razor blade out of his pocket and slowly drew the blade across the arm Phillip had just examined, gritting his teeth against the pain as the blade cut deeply enough for the tissue to separate and blood—black blood—to appear. Due to Albert’s advanced age, the gash closed up within seconds as the razor dragged up the length of his forearm. There was no way to interpret this demonstration for anything other than what it was.

“What the hell.” Phillip gasped and seemed to be fighting to keep his respiration steady as he turned to stare at Albert’s face.

Albert unclenched his jaw and strove to regain a relaxed demeanor. “Do you trust your own eyes?” Albert asked. The razor disappeared into a pocket, replaced by a cloth handkerchief, which he used to wipe the remaining blood from his arm.

“I’ll admit I’m drugged up, but nothing that would explain that.” Which Albert already knew because his research team had reported Phillip’s medical records and medication regimen. Phillip had pointedly requested medication that would not cause him to hallucinate or overly diminish his ability to reason. Albert couldn’t help but admire Phillip’s desire to remain alert enough to appreciate his surroundings. Although that had also concerned them as a sign that he might not hold out until his natural death.

“You accept what you just witnessed at face value?”

Phillip pursed his lips a moment before replying. “Okay. Yes. Obviously, there’s something superhuman about you.” His brows drew together as if another though occurred to him.

“That’s one way to put it,” Albert said. “I was once fully human, but now…no, not quite human anymore.”

Phillip sat still, apparently digesting that comment. Mulling over the possibilities. “Please.” Phillip swallowed, and a slight shiver drifted along his body. “I need you to spell out what you meant—earlier. Before your demonstration.”

Albert smiled. He’d hooked him. Now he just needed to reel him in. “About helping each other?”

Phillip nodded.

“You don’t need to die yet. I’ve been walking this earth for more than two thousand years.” Albert spoke calmly as Phillip froze in place, clenching his hands at his belly. That number tended to inspire awe.

But, of course, such a comment also inspired a touch of concern. But just a touch. The carrot at the end of the stick was too tempting to walk away without hearing Albert out. “Who are you? You’re immortal. But how?”

“Immortal in the sense that I, and others like me, won’t appear to become older beyond our age at the time of transition. Nor will we die of natural causes. We can be killed, though. You’ve witnessed my self-healing abilities, but anything that would instantly kill a human will kill me…us, too.”

“So, if I agree, this cancer would disappear just like that?” Phillip snapped his fingers.

“Like all of our ‘supernatural’ capabilities, self-healing improves over time. As a new convert, you won’t immediately feel better. It’ll take about a day for you to feel one hundred percent.”

Phillip was clearly enthralled, sitting straighter, fully alert. Albert was holding back, though. Dropping the “V-word” too soon would be a mistake. Damn the myriad of fictional accounts of vampires and their extreme notions of vampire conduct.

“You still haven’t answered the question. Who are your people?”

Albert hesitated, but eventually the word had to be said, and further delaying after being pointedly asked the question would be worse than saying it. “The word you’re searching for is ‘vampire.’”

Phillip burst out laughing, and a bit more tension peeled off from Albert’s shoulders. After catching his breath, Phillip grinned. “You had me going there for a while.”

Tilting his head to the side, Albert raised a single eyebrow as he continued to gaze at Phillip. “Not the usual reaction.” Which was more likely to be a cynical eye roll. This sense of humor was better. Definitely better. “Intriguing, though. You don’t believe me, do you?”

“Please,” Phillip scoffed and gestured toward the bright sun overhead.

🔽 🔼 Weekend at Bigfoot’s meets The Recruit/The Choice ~ New Orleans ~ Takes place shortly after the published stories end

New Orleans

The first part of this scene is told from Wilson’s (from Weekend at Bigfoot’s) 3rd-person POV, and the second part of this scene is told from Neil’s (from The Recruit & The Choice) 3rd-person POV. Written using these reader-supplied words:

pillow – new socks – candle – keys – book – obelisk – honesty – lightening – mountains – fountain – glass cat – pine needles – vampire – refrigerator – mud

Wilson

Oliver turned his gaze from the obelisk in New Orleans’ Chalmette National Historical Park and cocked his head at Wilson. “You seem tense.”

Wilson sighed and shook his head. “Sorry. I just…” But what could he say that wouldn’t sound paranoid? “It’s nothing.”

One perfectly groomed eyebrow quirked skyward. Oliver said only one word. “Oh?” But the glint in his eye added, “Honesty is the best policy.” Which was something they’d had a whole discussion about before moving in together.

“Well, you know…” Wilson shuffled his feet then glanced around to make sure nobody was within hearing distance. “It’s just that I’ll never be able to approach my articles with the same I-know-this-is-utter-bullshit-but-I’ll-write-an-interesting-and-respectful-story attitude I had before meeting you and your…uh…people in Tallbear.”

For all he knew, he might’ve spoken to Yeti shifters, too, when the tabloid he wrote for, Sensational News (Never Fake, We Swear!), sent him to the Himalayas last year to research an article. This week the features editor, Jerry, had sent him here to New Orleans to come up with a story on vampires. His boyfriend/partner, Oliver, freelanced so he’d tagged along so they could do touristy things during Wilson’s downtime.

“Ah.” Oliver smirked, but it didn’t mask his involuntary shiver. “Yeah, before you asked about it last year, I hadn’t thought too much about the possibility since we’d never heard of other kinds of shifters, let alone different paranormal creatures, but good point. Bigfoots exist, so why not vampires?”

“On the plus side, if they do exist—and that’s a big if—they’re not like vamps in books and movies. It’s not as if there are a lot of unexplained blood-drained bodies showing up, so I don’t think they pose a danger to humans. If anything, much of the lore is crap, and they’re secretive but have otherwise assimilated into our society.”

“And yet you’re still tense.” Oliver flipped back a few strands of his well-glittered hair that’d fallen across his eyes. “Did you find something?”

“Not really.” Wilson shugged. “I just got to thinking about which bits of lore would have to be true—like consuming blood—since that pretty much defines what vampires are. Probably also the immortality thing, otherwise if vampirism is some affliction people could randomly catch like a virus, and there weren’t organized immortals taking people in when they caught it, or were deliberately turned, or whatever, then vampires would be commonly known.”

“Makes sense.”

“So I figured, if—IF—they exist, they’re organized. At least these days. And other bits of random lore may or may not have come about from possible misinterpretations of behavior in olden times.”

“Still makes sense.” Oliver nodded. “So what’s making you so antsy like you’re ready to jump out of your soggy new socks?”

Wilson grinned. Oliver was referencing an incident from their earlier visit to the Mardi Gras Fountain. Long story short, they’d fallen victim to an impromptu water fight between some kids, Wilson’s new pride-themed socks had gotten soaked, then after he’d wrung them out, he’d accidentally stepped in some loose dirt before putting his shoes back on.

“More like muddy new socks.” Wilson winked. “But no, I didn’t actually find anything. I also figured they probably weren’t holding a bunch of people captive, feeding them and feeding off them. Over time, they’d surely be discovered. If they exist, they’re probably hiding in plain sight like you Bigfoots.”

“Nice. I could get behind the existence of benevolent vamps.”

“So yesterday, I visited blood banks to interview people about their processes. Because they’d still need blood, right, or they wouldn’t be vampires?”

“Right. But you didn’t find anything suspicious?”

“No. But, I didn’t really expect to. Even if it’s true that vampires exist and they’ve infiltrated blood banks, nothing would be obviously out of whack.”

“So?”

“So I’ve had a weird feeling like I’m being watched since then.”

“Ah.”

“I know. I’m being stupid and paranoid for no good reason because I’m not even going to pursue the potential reality of vampires for my article because outing any paranormal creatures pretty much opens up the potential for outing them all, and I wouldn’t do that to you. Besides, my interviews with the people claiming to have been bitten will make a more interesting article.”

A corner of Oliver’s mouth twitched up as if maybe he’d picked up on how Wilson had pointedly made that little speech for the benefit of any potentially listening vampires. But he didn’t address that, and instead asked, “So there are people who’ve been bitten?”

“Not by real vampires. That was easily debunked. Jerry probably won’t let me point that out in the article, though, since people who’ve been embarrassed in our stories are more likely to sue. They wouldn’t win, but it would still cost money.”

Oliver snickered. “It’s not as if sensible people reads those articles and walk away believing them.”

“Exactly.” Wilson patted his pocket, jingling the rental car keys, and suggestively flashed his eyebrows. “How about we go back to the hotel, light one of those scented candles they have in the room, and see how much of your hair glitter we can get embedded in the pillow cases?”

* * * * *

Neil

The eastern sky was lightening as the early morning sun rose, and a glass cat figurine on the window ledge cast an eerie shadow across Neil and Albert’s shiny new Paris apartment. Well, it was new to them, although the Paris faction had owned the lovely old building under one business entity or another for more than a century.

They weren’t technically members of the Paris faction, but since Albert was now on the global council, which was based there, and Neil functioned as Albert’s assistant until he mastered the French language and could contribute more meaningfully, the Paris faction had responsibility for their lodging and future identity changes.

Neil closed the refrigerator door and handed a bag of blood to Albert. He shivered and smiled as Albert’s fangs descended with a click, then frowned when Albert’s phone rang, interrupting their morning ritual.

Albert retracted his fangs and glanced at the phone’s screen. He answered with a cheery, “Hello, how are you?”

As a relatively new vamp, Neil’s hearing was nowhere near the caliber of a more-than-two-thousand-year-old vamp like Albert, but it was still better than it had been as a human. So he couldn’t help but overhear the other side of the conversation, too.

“Good morning,” the caller said, equally upbeat, but with a serious undertone. “I wanted to draw your attention to an email I just sent you. You might want to examine it before today’s meeting.”

Short and to the point. Abbreviated and unspecific since phone calls were the least secure method of communication. But reading between the lines, Neil knew the email was encrypted and would be virtually shredded immediately after reading. Both actions were done with highly secure vampire proprietary software. The referenced meeting was the daily council meeting Albert would attend later that morning.

“Thank you. I’ll do that.” Albert clicked off and placed the phone back on the table. He retrieved his laptop, briefly and securely connected to the Internet, downloaded his email, then disconnected.

Neil stood aside as Albert decrypted and opened the email. As Albert’s assistant, Neil was instantly privy to most council business. With their gradually increasing super hearing, the vamps didn’t bother even trying to keep most of their business private. Not from each other. Information would have to be incredibly sensitive to be discussed only within the council’s secure chambers, and even then, it usually only meant a delay.

The vast majority of the worldwide vampire population were, at a minimum, decades old. Most could count their age in centuries. A few in millennia. Among the very few (if any) annual additions, if a candidate wasn’t judged to have a trustworthy character, they weren’t given the offer to join the ranks of the immortal vampires.

A slow grin spread across Albert’s face as he read. When he was done, he destroyed the email before turning to Neil.

“Your face,” Neil said. “You look like the proverbial kid in a candy shop.”

Albert chuckled. “You’ll never guess.”

Neil bounced on his toes and turned on his best imitation of puppy dog eyes. “Please just tell me. I don’t know. Anybody I can think of that y’all might’ve turned would be eliminated due to their fame.”

Albert’s smile widened. “The email wasn’t about a new recruit.”

Neil’s blood might run black now, but his heart still pumped, and it was racing in anticipation. “Have I mentioned that you’re a big tease?”

“Bigfoot shifters exist.”

Neil’s jaw dropped at the same time something clattered onto the floor in the apartment above them. Nothing could be said aloud in vamp apartment buildings without everyone knowing it.

Albert laughed and looked up. “Like that, Pierre?” Another snicker because Albert could hear what Neil couldn’t. Yet. “Nope, that wasn’t for your benefit.” And after another short pause, he added, “Cross my heart,” then turned back to Neil.

“Seriously?” Neil’s wide eyes no doubt broadcasted his own doubt.

“Why not? Is it so far fetched considering you now know vampires exist?”

“Other than the fact that vamps have existed for millennia and have apparently never encountered them before?”

“Ah, there is that. My theory, amor meus, is that we might’ve crossed paths in the old days before there was easy global communication, and anyone who knew has died out. Nowadays, vamps live only in large cities, and Bigfoot shifters reside in rural areas. Very rural, as in mountains, giant sequoias, cabins, and forests with thick layers of pine needles. They actually live mostly as humans in nearby towns, but hide out in the sticks when they’re due to shift.”

“Wow. Today’s council meeting is going to be far less routine that usual.” Neil grinned ear to ear as Albert picked the bag of blood back up.

“Definitely.” Albert waggled his eyebrows. “And we may never know, but I’d be curious to know what would happen if a shifter were turned by a vamp. Would they continue to shift? Would they be stuck in either human or shifted mode?”

“I wonder if combo creatures exist, sheltered and hidden by the shifter communities?”

All food for thought, but Neil’s brain short circuited when Albert’s fangs snicked out. He’d think about the Bigfoots later. Much later.

🔽 🔼 Weekend at Bigfoot’s meets The Universe of The Recruit/The ChoiceBirthday Panic! (part 1) ~ Takes place a few years after the published stories end

Birthday Panic! (part 1)

PROMPT WORDS USED:
disastrous ~ abject ~ useless ~ soft ~ cow ~ nebulous ~ mature ~ brainy ~ faded ~ tearful

Wilson Banks stuffed his hands into his pockets and stared at the ground as Oliver Hughes paced with increasing urgency. The asphalt where they were standing at the far back corner of the Bangor, Maine Walmart Supercenter’s parking lot wasn’t truly interesting enough to merit such focused attention.

He felt as useless as the nearby empty cart corrals as his mind vacillated between calculating the least-likely-to-be-disastrous solution to their predicament and desperately trying not to splatter vomit across that already grungy surface. That would help neither their situation nor the mood of any poor sap who might step in it. Might help the roiling in his gut, though.

“To say that Lena will have a cow is putting it mildly,” Oliver muttered. “Not that I’m likely to get back to Tallbear to see it.”

Wilson winced. Oliver’s sister had had enough to say when Oliver had made the decision to move to Chicago to live with Wilson. She’d predicted all manner of doom and gloom befalling the Bigfoot community if Oliver ever failed to make it back to Tallbear in plenty of time for his annual shift. Doom and gloom that might very well come to fruition, so she had a fair ‘I told you so’ due.

“I’m sorry.” Wilson bit his lip and finally looked up to meet Oliver’s gaze.

“Not like it’s your fault.” Oliver lifted his hands with dramatic flair. “I never should have cut the travel timing so close.”

To be fair, there’d been a reasonable amount of cushion in their scheduling. Not the full week or two they would typically allow—that had always seemed like overkill—but several days of leeway.

Who could have predicted that a terrorist would plant a bomb at the airport they’d been scheduled to fly out of? Or that it would effectively take out both the power grid and the backup generators? Best case scenario, the airport in question would reopen in a few more days, but in the meantime, all flights in or out of that airport were cancelled.

Of course, all the nearest airports were flooded with people rescheduling their flights. Oliver and Wilson had been bumped from three different overbooked flights in the past couple days. The most recent, which they’d been assured they would be on, had dumped them two hours ago. That had been their last hope for a flight back to Northern California.

“Shouldn’t have trusted them. Should’ve have just spent a day driving to our contacts in the Cumberland Mountains community.” Oliver looked at his watch and shook his head. His usual meticulous grooming had taken a back seat to stress eating and working the problem—or trying to—but quite a bit of hair glitter remained to twinkle as his hair flopped back and forth. “Stupid, stupid, stupid! There’s not nearly enough time left now.” He barked out a harsh laugh. “If I get out of this unscathed, please, please don’t ever let me talk you into letting me tag along on another of your assignments this close to my birthday no matter how appealing it looks.”

“You will get out of this unscathed. We can head back up toward Pocomoonshine Lake. There’s a decent amount of forest there.”

“It’s probably the best bet, yeah.” If Oliver’s hangdog expression was any indicator, he didn’t have any confidence in that plan’s success. “And sure, it is kinda remote, but it doesn’t feel as isolated as the sequoia forests around Tallbear. More importantly, we don’t know the area. Don’t know where people might have cabins or be camping.”

“We’ve got all night. We’ll find something.” But in his heart, Wilson knew Oliver was right.

It wasn’t like they had either the time or ability to cover everything within a mile or so radius of some random seemingly-private spot. Oliver’s dramatic shift might draw unwanted attention to their presence, and there’d be nowhere to hide if anyone decided to investigate.

They both took a quick glance to the side where a mature man wearing faded jeans was ambling in their general direction. Presumably a Walmart employee, since that was who would park this far back in the lot, and there were a couple dozen vehicles scattered back here. And indeed the man—probably not quite old enough to be one of the store greeters—was angling toward a vehicle at the end of the row.

Wilson didn’t consider himself to be particularly brainy under pressure, but the nebulous idea that had brought them to this Walmart parking lot in the first place began fleshing out in his mind. A panel van might be the safety net they needed. They could rent one, then after Oliver’s shift, he could spend the day hiding in the back of that rather than wandering an unfamiliar forest.

They could go into the Walmart as they’d already planned, buy a huge cooler or two and enough fresh fruits and veggies to fill them, then go rent that van. Surely they could find somewhere remote enough before dawn for Oliver’s shift.

Oliver took Wilson’s hands in his as he whispered, “You know you’re going to have to abandon me in the woods, right?” His breath hitched, and his wobbly voice bordered on tearful. “We don’t have a breathing apparatus for you.”

“That won’t be necessary.”

Wilson and Oliver both jumped. That had come from the Walmart employee who was now veering toward them. His voice was warm and soft, yet his words were clear.

He seemed innocuous and friendly, yet something was off, because why? How had he heard Oliver’s whisper? Why would he think he knew what they were talking about, and why would he think whatever misconception he’d deduced was any of his business?

At best the guy was merely a busybody, but the possibility he was a serial killer felt further north of zero than the average encounter. Wilson’s stranger-danger meter pinged like a dagger to his heart.

Grasping Oliver’s hand, Wilson turned to scramble into their rental car, but in the very next instant, he found himself sitting in a moving vehicle—an RV?—buckled onto a sofa. blinking himself back to consciousness. Opposite him, buckled into an arm chair, sat the man who clearly was not a Walmart employee, smiling pleasantly.

Abject fear tore through Wilson’s mind, and his stomach clenched as if an icy fist were twisting his innards. “Oliver!” He turned his head quickly scanning his surroundings. There were four more men and women in the back of the RV with them, and two more in the driver and front passenger seats. Oliver was buckled beside him blinking like he, too, was coming back to awareness.

They were still holding hands. No…it was the opposite hand. Somehow that small thing—that they had been settled in a manner that might help ease their minds—helped. Not much, but he grasped that bit of hope like a lifeline.

Before either of them could say anything, the man spoke. “Rest assured, you are unharmed, and you will remain unharmed. We are here to help you out of the predicament you find yourself in.” His smile once again felt genuinely friendly as opposed to slick and cruel like one might expect upon waking up after an abduction. “Lena need never know how precarious your situation was.”

Wilson squeezed Oliver’s hand in a manner he hoped might be comforting, and Oliver returned the press. The man continued his monologue. “I sincerely regret the measures we had to take to contain the situation, but you were clearly about to bolt, yes?”

He didn’t wait for an answer, which was just as well. Wilson’s mind was too busy whirling with questions to decide whether or not it would be best to ‘fess up to that.

“Of course you were. I don’t blame you. That’s the sane reaction. But it was mission critical that the scene appear—for the sake of the security cameras, you see—as if we were all meeting up there as per some prearranged plans before heading out together. And that’s exactly what any casual observers and/or security cameras will see.”

“But, why?” Oliver found his voice first, and his eyes narrowed. “How do you know about my sister, and what is it you think you know about me and my so-called predicament?”

“Think?” The man outright chuckled at that. “We know everything about you and your people. We were quite excited to learn about the existence of another variety of paranormal beings when you pinged our radar in New Orleans a couple years ago. We’ve made quite a study of your people since then while also—” he nodded at Wilson. “—making sure you don’t write anything too on-the-nose about my people.”

Oliver’s grip on Wilson’s hand tightened painfully. The only time Wilson had been to New Orleans in the past couple years was when he’d been chasing down quotes for a story he’d been assigned about vampires for Sensational News (Never Fake! We Swear!). Oliver had tagged along for that one, too.

Vampires.

Vampires!

Wilson swallowed. “You’re not…uh…” But really, knowing that Bigfoot shifters existed made the idea of vampires also existing less insane than he would have considered it to be before learning Oliver’s secret.

In reply to Wilson’s not-quite-a-question, the man smiled, and with a pair of loud snicks, extended then immediately retracted a set of lethal-looking incisors.

Before Wilson could react beyond further stiffening, the man said, “That wasn’t to frighten you. Again, we mean you no harm. It was more to wash away any lingering doubts and to establish some mutual trust. We know about you and your people, Oliver, and now you know about us.”

Oliver’s voice was little more than a squeak. “Why are you helping me?”

🔽 🔼 Weekend at Bigfoot’s meets The Universe of The Recruit/The ChoiceBirthday Panic! (part 2) ~ Takes place a few years after the published stories end

Birthday Panic! (part 2)

PROMPT WORDS USED:
short ~ creep ~ dead ~ lettuce ~ handsome
(I use the remaining 5 words in the December continuation scene)

Oliver’s voice was little more than a squeak. “Why are you helping me?”

“And what,” added Wilson. “Precisely, is the plan?”

“Good questions.” The man who appeared to be the leader of this group of vampires sat back and tilted his head as he glanced back and forth between the two of them. “First the ‘why.’ If any group of paranormal beings were outed to humans, do either of you think that humans wouldn’t pull out all the stops to actively look for signs of others?”

“No,” Wilson said, and he and Oliver both shook their heads. “They sure wouldn’t.”

“Exactly. Trust me when I say this operation is a big fucking deal. Perhaps it would have been possible to simply monitor your own efforts and only step in if needed, but this was deemed to be the path least likely to result in any…complications that might make it trickier to maintain the secrecy we both require. Better to prevent those complications than to clean up after them.

“The decision to out ourselves to the two of you was voted on by our global council members and by every faction leader worldwide. Deliberately outing ourselves in this manner is unprecedented, but ultimately, we decided that you, Oliver, had as much to lose as we did if any paranormal beings were outed to humans, and you, Wilson, have proven your trustworthiness over the past few years and are likewise invested in maintaining the secrecy of paranormal beings.”

Good points. Wilson gave Oliver’s hand another gentle and hopefully reassuring squeeze.

“Now,” The man said. “Before we move on to the plan details, how about a round of introductions?”

The man spoke with the polite tone one might expect at a formal dinner party, and everything he’d said so far was done with a sincere undertone. Nothing creepy or sinister to set off alarm bells again.

In fact, the pragmatic side of Wilson that had once upon a time irked his ex-boyfriend because Wilson didn’t tend to show much emotion moved to the forefront. The vampires had the upper hand, seemed to genuinely want to help, and regardless, he and Oliver no way of escaping unless the vampires outright let them.

Wilson nodded and took a calming breath. “All right.” Introductions would be a step toward mitigating the vast information imbalance between them. “Obviously, you already know who we are.” In fine detail.

Oliver leveled some mild side-eye with a hint of curiosity in it at him, and a corner of his mouth twitched. They’d laughed over the years reminiscing about how calm Wilson had been when he’d first stumbled across Oliver in Bigfoot form, and the juxtaposition of that compared to the reactions of others in the handful of random Bigfoot sightings reported over the years.

Perhaps Wilson’s pragmatism was contagious, because a little of the stiffness in Oliver’s body relaxed, and he seconded Wilson’s response—albeit with a slight warble. “Yes, introductions would be great.”

The vampire returned their nods. “My name is Marvin. I’m the faction leader of the Boston-Worcester-Springfield Massachusetts collective. Quite the opposite of your people—” Marvin inclined his head toward Oliver. “—we’ve settled only in larger cities. Mostly in huge metropolises, but sometimes in groupings of closely situated less massive, but still large cities. Our faction was the closest, so we caught the assignment to keep an eye on you during your trip to Maine to put together a story on the Pocomoonshine Lake monster.” He winked at Wilson. “That doesn’t exist, by the way.”

Wilson snorted. “No, I didn’t think so. I’m more openminded to paranormal or supernatural possibilities than I once was, but that one is clearly explainable.”

Marvin pointed to each of the others in the camper and introduced them in turn—Luke was driving with Jessica in the passenger seat. The remaining four in the camper living area with them included Evan, who was on the short side and classically handsome. He stood closest to them and gave off an air of status. The remaining three were Josh, Scott, and Lauren, who were all nondescript in appearance.

There was nary a Lazarus or Lilith amongst them, but that made perfect sense since their apparent goal was to blend in with human society. Much like the Bigfoot community did.

“Evan is the leader of my security team.” Marvin gestured to the man in question. “Each of these fine folks here and those who are currently monitoring the location we’ve selected for our campsite are members of the security team.

“I assure you they are all very experienced and highly skilled and capable of handling any glitches to the plan that might arise.”

“I have a few concerns.” Oliver gnawed his lip, but his voice was steady. “One, anyone nearby when I shift needs a breathing apparatus such as scuba gear. And two, I eat a lot when I’m in my shifted form. We were about to go into that Walmart and fill up a couple coolers worth of fruit and veggies for me. And three, yeah, there’ll be trees, but tomorrow is supposed to be sunny. Won’t that cause you guys problems?”

“No worries, Oliver. We—or I should say members of our Portland-Seattle collective faction—have observed several shifts, so we’re aware of those needs. We have a scuba tank and mask stashed here in the camper for Wilson’s use. Nobody else who needs to breathe will be in the danger zone, and the burning-up-in-direct-sunlight thing is a myth. We’ll be fine.”

Nobody else who needs to breathe. Wilson and Oliver shared a wide-eyed glance.

Marvin continued as if he hadn’t just dropped a scary, we’re-kinda-dead-but-kinda-not bombshell on them. “And we’ve got three massive coolers on board filled with everything from heads of lettuce to carrots, corn on the cob, peppers, apples, oranges, bananas, etcetera, etcetera. You won’t go hungry. We’ve provided more than we’ve ever observed one of your people eating during a shift. And we’ve got oversized tarps to protect the camper during the shift itself.”

“Wow.” Wilson bobbed his head. He was equal parts impressed and horrified by their knowledge and competence. He shot another glance at Oliver, whose Adam’s apple was bobbing repeatedly. Oliver tended to swallow a lot when nervous.

Wilson had so many questions, like how did vampires manage to hide their existence when they were immortal? That might have been easy in centuries past, but in modern society with social security numbers, etcetera? For that matter, were they immortal? Had he been on the right track with his thoughts in New Orleans about a connection between vampires and blood banks? And how had they gotten himself and Oliver from that Walmart parking lot to this moving camper in the blink of an eye?

The answers to those questions would have to wait…assuming the vampires would be forthcoming at all. Oliver was his priority now. Wilson fully turned to Oliver and reached across so he could hold both hands.

He rubbed his thumbs along Oliver’s wrists. “I think we’re going to be okay, love. They need this to succeed as much as we do. They’re obviously uber-competent, and if they’d wanted to solve the problem by…uh…eliminating us, they never would have approached us in that parking lot full of security cameras. They’d have followed us to the boonies and done…well…whatever that plan would have been to us there. If we disappear now, the investigation will lead to them.”

One of the men—Scott—standing nearby snorted. “And we’d have missed out on a chance to observe a Bigfoot shift” He grinned and shook his head. “Not a chance.”

“Besides,” added Lauren. “We value human life.”

Josh bobbed his head. “Or Bigfoot life, as the case may be.”

“Point being,” Evan said. “’Eliminating’ people—particularly innocent people—to protect the secrecy of our existence is always a last resort. Can’t say it’s never happened. But we try very hard to avoid it.”

Oliver’s gaze bounced from one vampire to another as they spoke, then back to Wilson. “You’re right.” He gave a nervous laugh, but his body further untensed. “That makes sense.”

He turned back to Marvin to add, “I guess I have a general sense of your plan now—which kind of mirrors our own only with ramped up security…thank you for that—but I’d like to know the details of your plan.”

“Absolutely.” Marvin grinned broadly. “Here’s what we’re going to do…”

🔽 🔼 Weekend at Bigfoot’s meets The Universe of The Recruit/The ChoiceBirthday Panic! (part 3) ~ Takes place a few years after the published stories end

Birthday Panic! (part 3)

PROMPT WORDS USED:
accidental ~ overtake ~ yielding ~ distance ~ join
I used the other 5 words in the part 2 continuation scene (under the accordion tag, above).

“Absolutely.” Marvin grinned broadly. “Here’s what we’re going to do…”

The plan that Marvin proceeded to outline in detail did indeed mirror the vague plan Wilson and Oliver had worked out for themselves—assuming they were talking about a funhouse mirror.

Both plans included coolers full of food to sustain Oliver in his ravenous Bigfoot form. Thank goodness the vamps knew about that because Wilson would never forget what had happened to Oliver’s aunt. He was always careful to get more than enough food.

Both plans included a vehicle Oliver could hide in, except instead of a barren panel van he would essentially have had to huddle in for the entirety of what would’ve been a miserable birthday since they didn’t know what to expect privacy-wise in the area, they had this luxury camper and a wide net of security personnel who would be an effective early warning system if Oliver needed to go into hiding.

Wilson interjected with the occasional “Wow,” or “Impressive,” and Oliver sounded like he’d stifled a hysterical giggle at one point, but otherwise they were quiet as Marvin laid out the plan. Marvin didn’t bring it up, but the vampires could probably use whatever that mysterious power was that had zombified Wilson and Oliver, causing them to lose time as they’d been transported from that Walmart parking lot into the camper.

The security vamps who’d both cased a myriad of potential sites ahead of time and who were already forming an advanced perimeter around the chosen site were the most appreciated of all. Their “campsite” wasn’t as close to Pocomoonshine Lake as Wilson and Oliver had been considering but was every bit as isolated as they could hope for.

By the time Marvin finished, Oliver’s lips were twitching in the direction of a grin, and the tight knot in Wilson’s gut had relaxed. Wilson snaked an arm around Oliver’s waist and pulled him close. Oliver ramped up that starter grin to a full-wattage smile and rested his head on Wilson’s shoulder before returning his focus to Marvin.

“You know,” Oliver said. “Before Wilson came into my life, I avoided having others—even though they would have been other Bigfoot shifters—with me on my birthday. At least I avoided it once I was old enough for my parents to become more yielding on the subject.

“Even worse, the idea of being accidentally spotted by an outsider was…is…horrifying to me because the idea of being treated as a spectacle is awful on top of what it could mean for all my people if we were seriously outed.”

Oliver shook his head. “But this time? I’m just so damned overtaken by relief and thankfulness for all of you coming to my rescue that I don’t even care that I’ll be sharing the day with way more people than ever before. You can even get in line to join Wilson for his annual ‘biggie back ride’ if you want.”

Josh perked up at that, and who could blame him? Not Wilson. “Heck yeah. Sign me up.” He nodded at Marvin. “Assuming the boss allows it.”

Marvin snorted. “You’ll all be rotating on and off duty throughout the day. Up to you how you want to spend your down time.”

“Cool.” Scott nodded. “Count me in, too.”

“And me.” Lauren’s smile was almost as bright as Oliver’s.

“Any questions?” Marvin inclined his head toward Wilson and Oliver as they turned onto a dirt road. “We’re getting close to the site.”

“Already?” Oliver said. “How long were we knocked out?”

“More than an hour. Sorry about that, but there’ll be no lasting effects, and it felt best to get well out of Bangor before letting you waken.”

Fair point. They probably should have realized that since they’d been driving on a secondary highway in a very rural area since awakening, but they’d had other things on their minds.

Between that stretch of unconsciousness and Marvin’s talk, they’d closed the distance to their destination in seemingly no time at all. Which should probably be alarming, but with only a few hours to go until sunrise, it was more of a relief.

“Okay.” Oliver shrugged. “I don’t have any questions other than to ask if you guys are going to play fair.”

Marvin quirked an eyebrow. “Meaning?”

“Meaning, you’re going to get the full Bigfoot experience. Are you going to demonstrate some of your special vampire abilities for us?”

Which was exactly what Wilson had been wondering, too.

Marvin and Evan exchanged amused grins. Apparently, they’d covered all this in advance, because Evan replied without further consulting Marvin. “You’ll probably be surprised to learn that much of the lore is utter bullshit. We already mentioned that sunlight won’t affect us. Also, we don’t magically shift into bats, we don’t fly, and we don’t zip around at supersonic speeds.”

Oliver snickered. “What do you do?”

“Our senses of smell and hearing improve greatly as we age, topping out at around one thousand years. Eyesight is perfect, but otherwise normal. No microscopic or telescopic vision. Our memories from the time of turning are perfect.

“As noted earlier, we don’t have to breathe—we choose to cultivate a deeply ingrained habit of breathing when we are awake so as not to set off alarm bells when we are out in public, to take advantage of the benefits of that boosted sense of smell, and because we couldn’t talk without the airflow over our larynxes.

“We are immortal in that we won’t die of natural causes. The older we get, the better our self-healing properties, making us more difficult to kill. But we can be killed by anything that would kill you and that our self-healing can’t overcome quickly enough. Everything else is technology. Between being immortal and having perfect recall, it’s amazing what can be accomplished.”

Wilson straightened and blinked at Evan. “You mean the zombie ray is tech? Not some kind of mind meld superpower?”

“Correct.”

“Huh,” Oliver said. “I can’t decide if that’s more or less terrifying.”

“How about blood?” Wilson asked. “Was I on the right track in New Orleans?”

“You were.” Evan nodded. “We do require blood and cannot consume anything else without uncomfortable consequences. But in the years since your investigation, we’ve learned how to cultivate the blood ourselves, so we’re slowly phasing our people out of the blood bank and waste-blood disposal industries.”

Wilson was going to ask about how immortals got by in the modern world with the birth certificates and social security numbers needed to get by in life, but Marvin cocked his head like he was listening to something, and said, “We’re inside our security perimeter and about to turn off this dirt road.”

With that, Luke slowed the camper and turned off where there was a wide gap in the trees onto a path that looked like it had maybe once been driven over, but was overgrown to the point that it was obviously not currently being used for vehicles.

Marvin said, “There’s nobody currently within ten miles of this spot. There’s a small camper parked about five miles away, but our best guess is it’s for occasional use by hunters, and it’s currently out of season.”

“Sounds good,” Oliver said.

Wilson nodded. It did sound good. A path like this was necessary to get their camper off road far enough to be safe. And after all, the vamps had elevated senses and had been here for a couple days. Should be safe. Right?

Right?

To Be Continued in my January (or February?) 2024 Newsletter.

If you’re not already signed up for my newsletter, you can do so, here: https://authoraddisonalbright.com/newsletter/


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