He turned toward Vein. She still held her arms out.
What would happen if I plow through her? She’s bigger than I am, but...
Her left leg swung up. Swiftly and gracefully, she bent slightly at the waist and swept her right arm down and withdrew a knife from inside her boot.
Owen felt himself shrivel.
“Hey,” he said.
Vein grinned.
Owen looked at Darke, then at Vein. Then he turned slowly sideways. As he backed toward the wall, he found that he could keep his eyes on both of them at the same time. They made it easier by closing in.
“What do you want?” he asked, his voice shaking.
“Some of your blood,” said Vein.
“You’re...kidding.” His back met the wall.
“Do you see us smiling?” Darke asked.
They were both smiling, but not as if much was funny.
Darke came in from the left, Vein from the right. They didn’t stop until they were close enough to touch him.
“You can’t,” Owen said.
“Certainly we can,” Vein said.
“And certainly we will,” said Darke. Reaching out, she took the glass from his hand.
“Somebody might come in,” he told them.
“Somebody might not.”
“It’ll only take a few minutes,” Darke said, setting his glass on the floor.
“You can’t do this.”
“Yesss,” said Darke. “We can.”
Vein took hold of his hair and pressed his head against the wall.
“I’ll yell! Somebody’ll come and...”
His words stopped as his hand was lifted and slipped inside Darke’s open black shirt and guided to a breast.
The bartender had been right.
The breast was a small, smooth mound under Owen’s hand, tipped with a turgid nipple.
Vein’s black lips pressed against his mouth. As her tongue thrust in, Owen felt fingers quickly unbuttoning his shirt. As he fondled Darke’s breast, someone unfastened his trousers.
Pinned to the wall, he felt hands and mouths, tongues and teeth, quick hot flicks of the knife.
They sucked him, both at once.
What if somone comes in?
Nobody came in.
Not as they sucked and caressed him.
Not as he fondled and sucked and delved into them.
Not as all three of them sank onto the cold tile floor.
Not as Vein smothered him between her pillowy breasts and Darke straddled him, impaling herself.
Finally, drained, Owen lay sprawled on his back while Vein and Darke climbed off him and glided away.
“Why me?” he asked.
Vein, naked except for her boots, licked blood from her knife blade. “Don’t ask me, dahhling. It was Darke’s idea.”
She raised her left leg and slipped the knife down into the top of her boot.
Bending over, Darke stepped into her black leather pants.
“You’re a nice guy,” she said, pulling them up.
“I am?”
“Sweet,” added Darke, fastening her belt. It had the white beast-head buckle, but Owen found that it didn’t interest him nearly so much as Darke’s breasts. They were so small and pale and had such large, dark nipples. He remembered their springy feel, their heat, their taste. He started getting hard again.
Darke glanced at his rising penis, smiled and met his eyes.
“Nice guys shouldn’t always have to finish last,” she said. Digging a hand into a front pocket of her pants, she walked over to him. She pulled out a few bandages, then crouched beside him and tore one open.
Chapter Fifty-one
FINAL WARNING
With only half an hour left before showtime at the movie theater, there wasn’t much activity on the front lawn of Beast House. All the tourists seemed to be done with their main courses. Some sat at a table, chatting as they nibbled cake or sipped drinks. Others stood around in a small cluster, each holding a cocktail or a glass of wine. Several had drifted away.
Monica sat at one of the picnic tables, sipping red wine, talking and laughing with Dr. Clive Bixby and the two late arrivals, a young, married couple named Phil and Connie.
Phil and Connie seemed like nice folks. Real Beast House fans. While Warren had prepared their burgers, they’d told Dana about ordering their Midnight Tour tickets six months in advance, then driving all the way up from San Diego (with a stopover in Boleta Bay) for tonight’s festivities. They’d almost made it without incident, but a radiator hose had popped on Pacific Coast Highway only five miles south of town. So they’d walked the rest of the way and arrived an hour late.
Though Phil and Connie hadn’t missed out on any of the food or drinks, they’d gotten ambushed by Monica and the professor.
Must be loads of laughs, Dana thought.
Maybe I should go to their rescue.
She put a hand on Warren’s back. “I think I’ll join our friends over there.”
“Sure. Go ahead.”
“You could come, too. Doesn’t look like we’re being overrun by customers.”
Rhonda and Windy had already abandoned their grills. They were sitting across from each other at a picnic table, eating steaks and talking.
“I think I’m about ready for some food,” Warren said. “How about you?”
“I’m starving.”
“You could’ve gone ahead and eaten.”
“Without you?”
“What’ll you have?”
“How about a cheeseburger with the works?”
“My specialty.” He glanced at the three dark, dried-up patties already on the grill. “Guess I’ll throw on some fresh ones. You can go ahead and sit down. I’ll be along when the burgers are done.”
“I’ll get the drinks,” Dana said. “What would you like?”
“Maybe a beer.”
“Coming up.” She patted his back, then walked over to the bar.
Biff was there, getting more refills for himself and his wife, Eleanor. Though Dana hadn’t been trying to keep track, she’d seen Biff over here a number of times.
They’re really gonna be juiced, she thought as she watched the bartender pour Scotch into two glasses half-full of ice.
“After that,” Biff told him, “it was hit the ball, drag Bob, hit the ball, drag Bob.”
Dana recognized the old joke. She wondered how many times the bartender had heard it.
He laughed, though.
Biff paid him, tucked a bill into the tip glass, then picked up his drinks and turned around. Dana sidestepped out of his way. He didn’t seem to notice her. He walked carefully toward the place where his wife was standing with Tuck and the Lawrences. In spite of the chill, Eleanor hadn’t put on her sweater. It was still tied around her neck and hanging down her back.
“They’re feeling no pain,” the bartender said.
“The way his wife is dressed,” Dana said, “she needs all the antifreeze she can get.”
“And what’ll you have?”
“A couple of beers.”
“Bud, Bud Lite, Corona...?”
“A couple of Buds would be great.”
He turned away from the counter and bent over an ice chest.
“My name’s Dana, by the way.”
“I’m Hank.”
“Nice to meet you, Hank,” Dana said as he came back to the counter with a can of beer in each hand.
“Haven’t seen you around before,” he said, snapping open the cans.
“This’ll be my first Midnight Tour.” She opened her purse, took out her wallet, and found a ten-dollar bill.
“You’re going inside tonight?” Hank asked, taking the bill.
“Yep.”
“Couldn’t pay me enough to do that. Not at night. Hell, no.” He counted change into her hand. “Not that I’m chicken. Just got more sense than that. Not that I’m saying you haven’t got sense.”