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Interlude 3-2

  Cynthia’s foot was killing her, the twisted ankle aching with each

  step even in a brace and leaning heavily on her cart to take as much

  weight of possible off the ground. Overall a rather good result to be

  had from having fought a vampire with a knife and ,

  but that not lessening the pain any amount. In all

  honesty, it only made her

  hate that there was another week until she could see her vampire even

  more, and that Hank had refused to do the grocery shopping even

  one time when

  he “worked all day in the sun”.

  Maybe Martin could have put up with his dad dying a little early,

  wasn’t like she’d be worried about affording the therapy. Hell,

  Christopher would have paid someone to do the shopping for her from

  New York if she’d thought to call and ask before she reached check

  out.

  The thought bringing a small warmth to the woman’s check and a

  smile to her face, loading in bags even as a woman called behind her,

  “ma’am, you dropped some pasta!”

  Cynthia sighed, forcing a small smile on her face even as she turned

  and started, “thank you so much, you-”

  She was already taking the box from the woman before she fully

  processed the figure in front of her. Tall, tanned and with a jacket

  from a ww2 movie over a tank top and a pair of jeans. Her auburn hair

  looking halfway washed recently and still in the manish cut it’d

  been when she’d seen her the year before last. A large pair of

  sunglasses on her face the werewolf took off to reveal a gaping hole

  where her left eye should have gone.

  Cynthia’s mind shot to the revolver in her purse, silver loaded in

  the first chamber before a child’s crying nearby brought her to her

  senses. Too many witnesses, too many questions, even Christopher

  couldn’t save her from doing something here.

  Didn’t mean she didn’t feel a little spiteful.

  “I could shoot you in the face and take out that other eye.”

  “And right after I saved you that box of spaghetti,” the werewolf

  responded with an unbroken smile, moving to the other side of the

  cart and helping move bags into the trunk as she continued, “besides,

  I think the asymmetrical look works on me, don’t you think? I’m

  flattered though, haven’t seen you in… what, year now? Couple

  close calls with you and the boy, don’t think I forgot Staunton,

  but never anything personal as that first time.”

  Cynthia stayed stock still, glaring the werewolf down as the taller

  woman leaned over and ran a callused finger along the hunter’s jaw.

  The look in her eyes something Cynthia was very familiar with as she

  countered, “I’m not gay. Especially not gay for animals.”

  The werewolf actually looked a little annoyed at that, staring her

  down a few seconds before she returned to helping load the bags and

  countered, “right, just a necrophiliac… who also buys two bottles

  of whiskey in one trip? More a mead girl myself, not afraid to admit

  I have a bit of a sweet tooth, wanna share a bottle sometime?”

  Cynthia clicked her tongue, a quick look around the parking lot

  confirming no one was nearby and in eye line of them before she

  lurched forward. Revolver drawn from her purse, jammed into the small

  of the wolf’s back, lurching one of the thing’s arms behind her

  hard enough the shoulder made a small pop.

  The hunter practically growling as she told her, “you’re testing

  my patience, dog.”

  The werewolf let out a giggling squeak, craning her neck to look back

  at Cynthia and looked almost proud as she admitted, “well, usually

  prefer this the other way around, but I can make an exception if you

  promise not to slap me or pull my hair. My safe word’s Styrian,

  you?.” the silence that followed slowly killing the werewolf’s

  smile before she complained, “no banter? Not even a little?”

  “I can just shoot you and hope no one stops me driving out of here

  with a body in my trunk.”

  “Well, I’d hate to have my corpse ruin a perfectly good loaf of

  sourdough,” the werewolf muttered softly, looking off a moment

  before starting, “I need someone dead, I figured see if you were

  taking commissions.”

  Cynthia considered pulling the trigger then and there, a small little

  crumb of curiosity echoing in her head as she let the woman go and

  returned her revolver. Her lips a think line as she closed the trunk

  and told her, “I have ice cream and milk, return the cart for me

  and we’ll talk this out.”

  The werewolf raised a brow at that but took the cart all the same

  while Cynthia returned to the driver’s seat. Only as she was sat

  and buckled thinking to take her revolver out again, positioning it

  carefully in her lap with the hammer pulled in case the woman tried

  anything and settling back. The werewolf returning a few seconds

  later and muttering the whole time she climbed into the passenger

  seat.

  Cynthia’s glare burrowing holes into her until she slowly told the

  woman, “seat belt.”

  “I’m a werewolf.”

  “Seat belt.”

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  They shared their glares in that moment, the werewolf not resisting

  further as she slowly buckled in and leaned the seat back. A carton

  of cigarettes half out of her jacket before Cynthia scolded her, “no

  smoking in the car, I promised Christopher I’d stop.”

  “You’re not smoking,” the werewolf tried countering, another

  glare from Cynthia making her put away the carton with a new string

  of curses. Head shaking even as she tried starting the conversation

  in an overly faked pleasantry, “pleasure to meet you, Cynthia,

  Judith’s daughter right? Worked together a couple times, when I was

  still traitor, her and Elizabeth-”

  “I prefer to have a name for you too.”

  Another long glare and the werewolf let out a low groan, rolling her

  head back to announce, “Bloodhound,” another glare and she

  offered, “Eva if you insist on that sort of filth as a name.”

  “I’m not sure you won’t start moaning if I call you a dog

  again, so Eva works,” Cynthia agreed dryly, the woman beside her

  letting out a snorting laugh that felt like nails on a chalkboard.

  The noise continuing entirely too long for anyone above the age of

  thirteen before Cynthia interrupted her, “so, why are you trying to

  hire a hunter? If this is a turf war or whatever other bullshit you

  people do I don’t want to get involved unless real people are

  dying.”

  “Harsh words from a woman fucking the man who tried taking over

  England,” Eva declared, hand over heart before adding on, “well,

  no, don’t really consider the British people, but that’s more

  personal.”

  Cynthia hated the fact she actually found that a little funny, a

  barely contained hiccup of a laugh escaping her alongside a quick,

  “fuck you.”

  “I’m offering.”

  “Not happening,” Cynthia reiterated, once more asking, “now why

  do you want to hire a hunter?”

  “Well I was going to hire clowns, but the union stopped returning

  my calls after they got suspicious about no one returning from my

  nephew’s birthday parties,” Eva explained, that one not getting a

  laugh even while she dug through her jacket’s pockets. A handful of

  loose jerky messily extracted she took a piece from as she explained,

  “if you want a supernatural dead, you get a hunter to help with it.

  If they’re a dangerous supernatural, you get the most dangerous

  people you can to help. Jerky?”

  Cynthia stared her down from the corner of her eye, ready to ask just

  one question about it before deciding she didn’t care. Blindly

  plucking a piece of meat from the woman and chewing it for only a

  moment, face turned up in disgust at the relatively bland flavor of

  it.

  “Just because you’re cooking people doesn’t mean you can’t

  season them a little, it’s only polite,” the hunter complained,

  tossing the strip blindly back into the woman’s lap, “if you’re

  trying to fluster me you’ve got a long way to go.”

  Eva looked pleased with the reaction all the same, settled back in

  the seat with head rolled back as though she’d won that exchange.

  Cynthia briefly wondering if she’d made a wrong move even as they

  continued all the same. Neither speaking for a long while until the

  car was almost to Cynthia’s home and she wondered if she should

  have slammed the brake then and there

  Worries about looking weak outweighed by worries of leading the wolf

  to her home as she pulled off the side of the road a few blocks away.

  Both letting the humming engine roll until she finally asked, “how

  much are we talking?”

  “I can get access to fifty thousand in cash in a few weeks, seventy

  if you don’t mind making a couple smaller werewolves mad, paid

  within thirty hours of the target dying,” Eva explained, an almost

  business like tone to her words as she listed off her numbers, “was

  trying to figure out who to choose, you seemed best. Your husband’s

  too hands off, doesn’t like the work, I didn’t think he’d go

  through the plan thoroughly enough.”

  Cynthia let out a small grunt of acknowledgment, actually smiling a

  little at that description, “so you like the fact I get off on

  killing you assholes?”

  Eva chuckled once more, twisting in her car seat, first couple

  buttons of her flannel undone without Cynthia noticing as she purred,

  “don’t you?”

  “Had a great time in the bath imagining Christopher skinning you

  alive after we met,” Cynthia agreed, revolver finally raised from

  her lap as she demanded, “tell me who you want dead and why.”

  Eva glared her down, the woman reaching one hand up and jerking the

  collar of her shirt aside to reveal a scar that looked different

  among the mural of raised cuts she bore. Burned, twisted, the shape

  of a goblet with a teardrop within it around the size of her hand, a

  dozen lines broken and knotted across its existence like she’d

  tried removing or disfiguring the mark a dozen times.

  Still so easy to tell what it was even as Eva finally answered, “I

  want to you to kill The Styrian. Was looking down at this the other

  day and just thought

  better if she was dead,
get it?”

  Cynthia stared dully at that mark, leaned back as she thought on it

  for a long moment before deciding to be blunt with it. “You might

  as well ask me to kill God, dumb ass. She’s almost old as

  Christopher, has constant security, and is a member of the

  Triumvirate. Even if I got close to her with weapons, I’d need to

  then kill her and get out without getting caught. Even if I did that,

  every supernatural this half of the country is going to know there’s

  a price on my head once they figure out who did it, and they will

  
figure out. I doubt Christopher’s saving me if I do something

  like that.”

  If looks could kill Cynthia probably would have been struck down

  there, Eva’s eyes bearing down into her even as the werewolf

  claimed, “no one will miss her.”

  “People will miss me. Now get out of my car,” Cynthia ordered,

  thinking on it for a moment before grabbing a business card from the

  console, her husband’s auto shop, as she wrote an address on the

  back. Passed over to the werewolf as she told her, “you really want

  to risk your ass hiring a suicidal hunter and don’t want to go for

  Hank, try this bar. If they don’t shoot you on sight you can

  probably find some redneck with more bullets than brains for the

  money you’re throwing around.”

  Eva didn’t speak, didn’t continue complaining, nothing. Just

  staring her down while she ripped the card from her hands and got out

  of the car, marching herself down the road while Cynthia drove off in

  the other direction. What humor she felt from the situation dying

  down as a small dread built in the back of her head.

  The conversation rolling over in her head the rest of the way home,

  pulling into the driveway and unloading groceries. The throbbing of

  her ankle ignored until everything was put away and she stood in her

  empty bedroom staring down at Christopher’s contact in her phone.

  Thumb hovered over the call button for too long until she flipped it

  closed and tossed it aside. What were the chances she actually found

  someone willing to take on a job that stupid?

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