Susan Krinard

Dark of the Moon


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from his mouth and numerous cuts, pooling beneath his feet. His eyes were nearly swollen shut, and several of his teeth were loose. At least one of his arms was broken.

      Mike strolled up to him and drew his knife. “I’ll kill you quick,” he said, “if you call me boss.”

      Joe spat blood in the gang leader’s face. Little Mike roared and raised the knife to slit Joe’s belly.

      “Stop.”

      The voice rang with authority, echoing from wall to wall. Mike swung around, knife raised. His followers also turned, but instead of confronting the intruder they melted into the shadows and kept their weapons at their sides.

      The man was not tall, nor was he particularly big. He wore a top hat, a handsomely tailored frock coat, a gleaming white shirt and a perfectly tied cravat. His every movement was elegance itself, hinting at wealth and power. His face was handsome and utterly without fear. No man had ever looked more out of place than this one.

      “Good evening,” he said, planting his gold-headed cane on the stained floor. “I see that you boys have been amusing yourselves.”

      Little Mike stepped forward. “So?” he said. “What’s it to you?”

      The stranger regarded Mike as he might a particularly ugly rat. “You’ve chosen a poor place to conduct your business,” he said. “If you wish to continue, you will have to work for me.”

      “Who the hell are you?”

      Dark eyes fixed on Mike’s. “My name is Raoul Boucher. I am claiming this territory on behalf of my…associates.”

      Little Mike burst out laughing. His underlings tittered, but their amusement didn’t last. They fell silent as Mike advanced on Boucher, a length of chain in one hand and the knife in the other.

      “You’ve made a big mistake, boyo,” he said. “There won’t be nothing left of you when we’re finished.”

      Not a hint of apprehension touched Boucher’s smooth face. He simply stood, waiting, until Mike charged. Then, with a movement almost too swift for Joe to follow, he thrust out with his cane and caught Mike in the belly. Little Mike stumbled and fell flat on his face.

      “One last chance,” Boucher said. “Swear allegiance to me.”

      Mike struggled to his feet and scrambled away, wiping blood from his nose. “Get him!” he shrieked.

      No one moved. Frothing with rage, Little Mike lunged at Boucher. This time the stranger caught Mike by the collar, transferred his grip to Mike’s neck and twisted his hand. The sound of Mike’s neck snapping was grim and final.

      Boucher dropped the corpse to the ground. The leaderless Nineteenth Streeters scampered away like rabbits, leaving only a handful behind.

      “Well,” Boucher said. He looked over the remaining hoodlums with appraising eyes. “You may live, if you do as I say without question. Return to this place in two days’ time, at midnight, and my vassals will instruct you.”

      The gang members glanced at each other, uncertain.

      “Go,” Boucher said. They ran. Boucher glanced at Joe. He sauntered toward him and stopped a few feet away.

      “Will you survive, human?” he asked.

      Joe forced his tongue to obey him. “I will,” he said thickly, “if you’ll cut me down.”

      Boucher cocked his head. “I believe you will,” he said. Still he made no move to help. “You didn’t cry out,” he said.

      “I…don’t…”

      “You made no sound when they tormented you. You have courage.”

      Joe felt his body shake and realized that he was laughing. “What…good would it do to scream?”

      Boucher studied him for a moment longer and then released the chain that held Joe suspended. Joe fell, striking the ground hard. The pain nearly destroyed him.

      Boucher knelt behind him. Joe felt the cuffs spring open, though Boucher had no key.

      “Can you stand?” Boucher asked.

      Joe crawled to his knees. Whirling blackness tried to suck him under. A strong, narrow hand pulled him up by the ruins of his shirt.

      The eyes that stared into his were a deep brown tinged with red. “Will you serve me?” Boucher asked.

      A coldness washed over Joe. “How?”

      “As my enforcer. You will keep other humans obedient to me.”

      “Hu-humans?”

      Boucher smiled. There was something wrong with his teeth.

      “Don’t be concerned, boy,” he said. “You will no longer be among them.”

      He leaned forward, tearing open the collar of Joe’s shirt. It seemed for a moment that he was kissing the base of Joe’s neck, and Joe thrust out his arms in panic. But then he felt a strange sort of peace mingled with incomprehensible pleasure, and his muscles relaxed.

      When he woke, there was no pain. He was naked between clean sheets, not a single injury marking his body. The room in which he lay was spartan, holding little more than a bed and a washbasin, but fresh clothing hung in the plain armoire against the wall.

      Joe rose from the bed, feeling the strength surge through his body, aware of a ravening hunger such as he had never known. He had just begun to dress when Boucher walked into the room.

      In an instant Joe remembered everything. And something strange happened inside him; when he looked at Boucher, he knew he was bound to the other man by means he had no way to explain.

      “Good,” Boucher said. “You will come with me, and I will instruct you in what you must know.” He smiled and touched Joe’s face in the way a man might stroke a favored pet. “You shall keep your name for the time being. Someday, when you earn it, you may choose your own.”

      He turned for the door. Joe closed his eyes, caught in a maelstrom of sensation.

      “What am I?”

      Boucher paused. “You are more than human, my protégé. And you will live a thousand years.”

      DORIAN WOKE AGAIN. It was several minutes before he could distinguish the past from the present.

      Joseph. Dorian. Neither name had any meaning now. Soon the husk of his body would begin to rot. He would become incapable of movement, and then his brain would start to die.

      He let himself sink back into the half world of formless dreams and visions. Sometimes he thought he saw Gwen Murphy, her heart-shaped face framed with soft red curls, green eyes blazing, full lips parted as she prepared to admonish him. “You can’t die,” she said. “I won’t let you.”

      Strange how clear her voice was. Clear and strong, as if words alone could draw him back from the precipice. But it was for her sake he’d come here. It was easy to let go when he remembered her sleeping in the hospital chair, her lashes brushing her cheek, completely unaware of how close she had come to death.

      His cracked lips moved in a smile. Gwen. She had saved him. Saved him by showing him what he had to do. He closed his eyes.

      “No!”

      He felt something touch his arm and tried to brush it away. Perhaps the rats had grown bold again.

      “Dorian!”

      Air blew softly in his face. He imagined that he smelled flowers.

      “Wake up!”

      Someone began to shake him. He rolled onto his side, too weak to fight his attacker. It kept after him, claws furrowing his shirt and digging into his skin.

      “No,” he murmured. “Let me be.”

      “Never.”

      The