Pretty When She Kills

Pretty When She Kills by Rhiannon Frater Page A

Book: Pretty When She Kills by Rhiannon Frater Read Free Book Online
Authors: Rhiannon Frater
Tags: Fantasy, Horror, Vampires
always feel this really super-cold breeze under the bridge. And...and...I’ve been seeing things out of the corner of my eye around my house. When I drove by the cemetery the other day, this old man was sitting on a gravestone and he waved at me. And now I think he’s a ghost. Then I realized that the other day I said hello to this woman walking down my street and my friend, Giselle, who was with me, didn’t see her. I thought she was jerking my chain, but now...now...”
    “You think you’re a medium?” Jeff offered.
    “Uh huh. Just like that Lost Highway chick,” Samantha said with a solemn nod.
    “Got that reference, and Patricia Arquette is hot,” Benchley said.
    “Tell me I’m not going all Allison Dubois, please, Jeff. Please!” Samantha clutched at his hands, her big eyes imploring him.
    “Have you ever sensed or seen anything before the last few months? In your childhood?” Jeff asked. He plucked a pen from the jar and began taking notes on the cover of her folder.
    “No, never.”
    “When did you start noticing things? Like maybe cold spots, shadows, flashes of people out of the corner of your eye, that sort of thing?”
    Samantha stared at him as she pondered his question. Slowly, her eyes grew larger. “That whore!”
    “Amaliya reference, right?” Benchley asked Jeff.
    Jeff nodded.
    “I’m catching on.” Benchley looked proud.
    “After I drank from her! When I almost died and you made me drink her blood!”
    “Good thing you don’t have customers right now because that would be really hard to play off,” Benchley said.
    “Jeff, you made me drink her blood! You said it would heal me! You didn’t say it would make me go all Ghost Whisperer !”
    “Sam, are you sure? You never experienced anything like that before?”
    “Dude, I’m Baptist. We believe in God, the devil, and angels. Not ghosts.”
    Jeff rubbed his brow, pondering everything she had told him. “A lot of people do end up coming into their abilities with a near death experience. That could be why you’re now seeing things.”
    Samantha rubbed the spot where the sword had skewered her a few months before. “Yeah? You mean it’s not the skank’s fault?”
    “Not sure. Let me check on something.”
    Sliding out from behind the counter, Jeff headed into the back of the store to where he kept his private collection of books written by previous vampire hunters. The fire safe was tucked into a corner of his office. After unlocking it, he pulled out a few of the leather bound journals.
    Benchley and Samantha lingered in the doorway to his office, watching. He sat at his desk and started flipping through the tomes. Rubbing his leg, he rested his artificial leg on a rest under his desk. Every once in a while his stump would give him issues. Today, he was having phantom pains in a foot he no longer possessed.
    “So you think it’s really because I almost died?” Samantha pulled on her bottom lip with her teeth.
    “It’s totally plausible. Near death experiences place you at the veil between the living and the dead. You hover between the two. So you begin to see both,” Benchley explained as he darted into the office to sit on a stool near Jeff’s desk. He craned his neck to see the journal in Jeff’s hands.
    Opening up one of his father’s old journals, Jeff scanned for an entry that had been made soon after his mother’s death. His father’s obsession with vampires had increased tremendously after his wife had been murdered and his son maimed by one particularly nasty vampire. Flipping through pages, he listened to Samantha and Benchley chatting back and forth, but really didn’t pay attention to what they were saying.
    He was concerned that Samantha’s abilities appeared to be growing, not receding. Some people had very clear visions of the dead soon after a near death experience, but would eventually lose the ability.
    “And you didn’t see her until today? Not even a passing glimpse?” he asked, cutting off

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