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  Dangerous Girls

  The Taste of Night

  A Novel by

  R.L. Stine

  For Susan Lurie, still dangerous after all these years.

  Contents

  Part One: July

  Chapter One: My Sister is a Vampire

  Chapter Two: “Can You Kill Your Own Daughter?”

  Chapter Three: The Vampire Hunt

  Chapter Four: “Good-bye, Livvy”

  Part Two: One Month Earlier

  Chapter Five: Livvy’s Graduation Party

  Chapter Six: Night Birds

  Part Three: Earlier That Day

  Chapter Seven: The Evil at Home

  Chapter Eight: “The Monster Did It”

  Chapter Nine: The Vampire in the Tree

  Chapter Ten: Is Livvy in the House?

  Chapter Eleven: Rip

  Part Four

  Chapter Twelve: Livvy’s New Love

  Chapter Thirteen: A Surprise Reunion

  Chapter Fourteen: The Taste of Night

  Chapter Fifteen: “I’m Not Just a Vampire”

  Chapter Sixteen: Destiny Flies

  Chapter Seventeen: Trouble at Ari’s House

  Chapter Eighteen: Who Is the Next Victim?

  Part Five: Two Weeks Later

  Chapter Nineteen: “Maybe He’s Just What I Need”

  Chapter Twenty: “Now You Think I’m a Psycho Nut”

  Chapter Twenty-One: Dad Might Kill Livvy

  Chapter Twenty-Two: One Evil Dawn

  Chapter Twenty-Three: “I Want to Go Back to My Old Life”

  Chapter Twenty-Four: A Death in the Vampire Family

  Chapter Twenty-Five: “It Won’t Be Pretty”

  Chapter Twenty-Six: “I’d Like to Tear Destiny to Bits”

  Chapter Twenty-Seven: Blood on Her Lips

  Chapter Twenty-Eight: Livvy’s Revenge

  Part Six

  Chapter Twenty-Nine: The Party Crasher

  Chapter Thirty: Livvy and Harrison

  Chapter Thirty-One: “You’re Still Connected to Your Sister”

  Chapter Thirty-Two: A Date with a Vampire

  Chapter Thirty-Three: Harrison and Livvy

  Chapter Thirty-Four: Destiny and Patrick

  Chapter Thirty-Five: An Evil Creature of the Night

  Chapter Thirty-Six: An Unexpected Murder

  Chapter Thirty-Seven: The Real Murderer

  Part Seven: Night of the Full Moon

  Chapter Thirty-Eight: Harrison’s Big Date

  Chapter Thirty-Nine: Destiny Surprises Patrick

  Chapter Forty: Livvy Surprises Patrick

  Chapter Forty-One: A Vampire Must Die

  Chapter Forty-Two: “One Last Kiss…Before I Kill You”

  Chapter Forty-Three: Thicker Than Blood

  About the Author

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  part one

  JULY

  chapter one

  MY SISTER IS A VAMPIRE

  AS DESTINY WELLER MADE THE TURN ONTO COLLINS Drive, a light rain started to fall. She squinted through the windshield, through the tiny, shimmering droplets of water, and pressed her cell phone to her ear.

  “I think it’s going to get really stormy,” she said, glancing up at the lowering, black clouds. “I really don’t feel like going out tonight, Ana-Li.”

  Her friend Ana-Li May made disappointed sounds at the other end. “I know it’s hard for you, Dee. But the summer is going fast, you know. You should try to have at least a little fun.”

  Fun? How could she be talking about fun?

  Destiny clicked on the headlights. The wipers left a smear on the windshield glass. She kept forgetting to replace the blades.

  Hard to think about things like that.

  “You’ve been really great,” she told Ana-Li. “I mean, all summer. You’re the only one who knows the truth about Livvy. I mean, except for Dad and Mikey. And Ari, of course. And you’ve been—OH!”

  Destiny let out a cry. The cell phone fell from her hand as she hit the brakes hard. Her tiny, silver-gray Civic skidded on the wet pavement.

  Startled by the sound, the girl on the sidewalk whipped her head around. Her face came into view.

  Destiny gasped. No. Wrong again.

  A car honked behind her. Heart pounding, she lowered her foot on the gas pedal and fumbled for the phone.

  She could hear Ana-Li on the other end. “What’s wrong? Dee? Are you okay?”

  “Sorry.” She leaned forward to squint through the smeared windshield. The rain pattered down harder. “I keep losing it. Every time I see a girl with long blond hair, I think it’s Livvy.”

  “That’s why you’ve got to get out of yourself,” Ana-Li said. “You know. Go out. We’ll go to a club or something. Dance our asses off. Maybe meet some hot guys. It’ll take your mind off…everything.”

  “How can I take my mind off it?”

  She didn’t mean to scream, but the words burst out of her in a shrill, trembling voice. “Ana-Li, my twin sister is a vampire! She’s out flying around, prowling at night, hungry for warm blood, killing—killing things. I…I don’t know what she’s doing. I haven’t seen her in two months. Do you know what that’s done to my family? To my dad? My poor little brother?”

  “Yes, of course I know, Dee. You don’t have to scream at me. I—”

  “There’s no way I can take my mind off it,” Destiny continued. She made a sharp right, tires skidding again. She’d almost missed her turn. “I think about Livvy all the time. And Ross too. I still can’t believe he went with her. Ana-Li, I…I want to see Livvy. I just want to hug her. I know it’s impossible, but I want to tell her to come back to us.”

  There was silence at Ana-Li’s end.

  “Ana-Li? Are you still there?”

  “Yeah. I just don’t know what to say. You know, I’ll be leaving for orientation. Yale is a long way from here. I thought maybe in the short time we have…”

  Destiny pulled into a parking spot at the curb in front of the familiar, low redbrick building. The rain had slowed. The wipers left a thick, gray smudge as they scraped over the glass.

  That’s the way I see everything these days, Destiny thought bitterly. Through a dark blur.

  “Listen, Ana-Li. I have to go. I’m here, at my dad’s office. I have to pick him up because his SUV broke down again. He never takes care of it.” She sighed. “He can’t seem to take care of anything these days. Just stays in his lab twenty hours a day. Then he comes home too wrecked to talk or do anything.”

  “Sorry,” Ana-Li murmured on the other end.

  “No, I’m sorry,” Destiny said. “Here I am, laying all this on you again for the hundredth time. I’m really sorry. Can I call you later?”

  “Yeah. Sure.”

  She clicked the phone shut and dropped it into her bag. Then she took a deep breath while checking her short, blond hair in the mirror.

  Ana-Li has been terrific, she thought. She’s always been a great friend. After that horrible night Livvy and Ross decided they wanted to live forever as vampires…Ana-Li has always been there for me.

  She slid out of the car and gazed up at the sign above the glass door: WELLER VETERINARY CLINIC. Yes, her dad still treated sick cats and dogs, spayed and neutered them, gave them their shots, washed away their fleas, and mended their broken bones. But he spent most of his time in his lab at the back of the building, reading, studying old books, mixing chemicals, working out endless equations, searching for a cure for vampirism.

  Destiny made her way through the brightly lit waiting room, empty now, quiet except for the gurgling sounds from the fish tank in the wall. “Hey, Dad—are you ready?” Her voice echoed down the hall as she passed the empty examining room
s.

  “Dad?”

  She found him hunched over the worktable in the lab, surrounded by darkness, standing under a cone of light from the single ceiling lamp. His eyeglasses reflected the light. He didn’t seem to hear her at first.

  “Dad? I’m here.”

  To her surprise, he had tears running down his cheeks. He crumpled the papers in his hand, then furiously ripped them in half and sent them flying to the floor.

  “Dad—?”

  Dr. Weller turned to Destiny, his face flushed, his eyes hidden behind the shiny glasses. “I’m afraid I have very bad news,” he said.

  chapter two

  “CAN YOU KILL YOUR OWN DAUGHTER?”

  DESTINY’S BREATH CAUGHT IN HER THROAT. “DAD—what is it?” she finally choked out. She hurried across the room and stood across the table from him, under the bright, white light.

  He shook his head. “It’s my work. It’s going nowhere. I’m no closer to finding a cure than I was two months ago.”

  Destiny grabbed the edge of the metal table with both hands. “But you’ll keep trying, right, Dad? I mean, you’re not giving up, are you?”

  His pale blue eyes stared at her from behind his glasses, thick gray eyebrows arching high on his balding head. “I don’t know how much time I have.” His voice came out in a whisper. His eyes didn’t move from Destiny’s. “I’m under a lot of pressure.”

  “Pressure? I don’t understand, Dad.”

  He stepped around the table and put an arm around her shoulders. “A lot of pressure.” He hugged her briefly, then guided her to his small office at the side of the lab.

  He dropped heavily into his desk chair, brushing back the tuft of gray hair on top of his head. Destiny stood, tense, in front of the desk, arms crossed over the front of her blue T-shirt.

  “You know I have chosen two roles,” Dr. Weller said, gazing up at her. “I’m the Restorer, the one who can restore neophyte vampires to their normal lives, if they’re not already complete vampires.”

  I know very well, Destiny thought with a shiver. You don’t have to explain, Dad. You restored me, remember? I was bitten too, just like Livvy. But you restored me, and now I’m fine, perfectly normal. But Livvy…

  “And I’m also the Hunter,” her dad continued, breaking into her thoughts. “Ever since your mother died…killed herself because of a vampire…I…I…I’ve vowed to kill as many vampires as I can. To rid Dark Springs of this…this filthy plague.”

  He rubbed his chin. Destiny saw that he hadn’t shaved for at least a day or two. “My two roles…curing and hunting…they don’t always go together.”

  “What do you mean, Dad? Destiny lowered herself into the wooden armchair across from the desk. “What’s going on?”

  “I’ve been working so hard to find a cure,” he said. “You know. A cure for Livvy. And for Ross too. And any other vampire who wants it. And I’ve been neglecting my duties as a hunter.”

  Destiny leaned forward, her hands tightly clasped. All her muscles tensed as her father went on.

  “The vampires in this town…they’ve become an even bigger danger. There are too many of them. People are starting to become aware…”

  Destiny swallowed. “You mean, that couple that was murdered in Millerton Woods last weekend?”

  Dr. Weller nodded. “The police have been able to keep everything quiet. People in Dark Springs don’t know about the vampires. Like your friends, Dee. Your friends all think that Livvy and Ross ran away together. They…they don’t know the truth.”

  Destiny nodded. “Just Ana-Li knows. And Ari, because he was there that night. No one else.”

  Dr. Weller frowned, deep lines creasing his forehead. “Well, people are starting to guess. The police have been getting calls. Mayor Hambrick has been getting frightened calls. He wants to get the governor to call in the National Guard. I can’t let that happen. Too many innocent people will be killed.”

  “What are you going to do?” Destiny asked.

  “I have no choice. I have to get my hunters together. I have to hunt them down—and kill as many vampires as I can.”

  Destiny let out a sharp cry. “Kill them?”

  She suddenly pictured Livvy…Livvy before this all happened…when their mother was still alive. Livvy in that sexy red halter dress she wore to the spring dance their junior year. Her hair all shimmering, cascading down her bare back. The bright red lipstick…her sparkly earrings…her smile…

  Destiny shook herself to chase the picture away.

  “You can’t just go out and kill vampires,” she told her father. “How will you find them?”

  Dr. Weller leaned forward over the desk. He grabbed Destiny’s hands and held them between his. “There’s an abandoned apartment building across the river from the campus. It was supposed to be student housing, a dorm for the community college. But the construction company went bankrupt and the building was never finished.”

  Destiny narrowed her eyes at him. “And—?”

  “We think several vampires are using that building. Sleeping there during the day. Living in the apartments. I have my hunters organized. We’re going there. Going into those apartments and killing as many of them as we can.”

  Destiny pulled her hands free. She jumped to her feet. “When? When are you doing this?”

  “In two weeks—the next full moon.”

  Destiny swallowed, her throat suddenly dry. “Two weeks!”

  He nodded. “Yes. We’ll go in at sunrise when they’re all asleep. I wanted to warn you. I mean, if something happens to me…” His voice trailed off.

  “But, Dad—” Destiny realized she was shaking. “What about Livvy? What if Livvy is in one of those apartments? You…you can’t kill your own daughter. You can’t!”

  A sob escaped Dr. Weller’s throat. “My daughter is already dead.”

  Destiny moved around the desk and grabbed her father’s sleeve. “But she’s not! She’s still alive. You know she’s not dead. You can’t do it. You can’t kill her—can you?”

  “I don’t know!” Dr. Weller hugged Destiny again and held her tight. “I don’t know. I don’t know! If I find Livvy in there…I don’t know what I’ll do.”

  chapter three

  THE VAMPIRE HUNT

  DR. WELLER PULLED THE DARK BASEBALL CAP DOWN over his head and gazed up at the moon, full and low in the sky, pale white as the sun began to rise. Dressed in black, hats down over their foreheads, the hunters—twenty volunteers—gathered in a silent circle around him at the open entrance to the tall apartment building.

  Dr. Weller heard the flap of wings high in the sky. He glanced up the side of the redbrick building, at the window openings, glassless and dark. A tall pile of concrete blocks stood near the front of the entrance. Boards of Sheetrock in varying sizes, wire, and rolls of cable were strewn across the ground. Signs that the construction had stopped abruptly, long before the building had been completed.

  A thin arc of red sunlight rose in the distance. The hunters leaned on their wooden stakes, waiting for their orders.

  Dr. Weller took a deep breath. “The vampires should be sleeping by now,” he said, eyes raised to the window holes. “But this may not be easy. If they somehow got word that we were coming…”

  “We can handle them,” a young man said, raising his stake in front of him like a knight’s lance.

  “They might have set a trap for us,” Dr. Weller said. “We need to take all precautions. As we spread out in there, we need to be in constant communication. Did you check your walkie-talkies?”

  Some of them muttered yes. Some nodded. Some reached for the phones clipped to their belts.

  “Make sure they’re all set on the same frequency,” he continued. “If you’re in any trouble, just press the button and shout your location. We’ll all hear you.”

  They nodded again. One man at the edge of the circle made a striking motion with his pointed stake, as if he were killing a vampire.

  “Let’s go,” Dr. Weller
said. He hoped they didn’t see the shudder that ran down his body. He spun to the building and began jogging toward the entrance, raising his stake as he ran.

  Livvy? Ross? Are you in here?

  The thought of his daughter lying white and pale, asleep in this vacant building, made his stomach churn. He could feel the muscles tightening in his throat. A wave of nausea swept over him, and for a moment, he thought he was going to vomit.

  Livvy?

  Oh, Livvy.

  Then he was inside the dark lobby, cooler in here, the smell of plywood and pine and plaster dust, and his stomach settled. Through his glasses, his vision grew sharp as he focused his mind. In the dim light, he could see the half-tiled walls, the opening of the elevator shaft.

  He suddenly could hear every footstep of his hunters, hear their shallow breaths, even hear their thoughts! At least, he imagined he could.

  Every sense alive now.

  Alive. Yes, I want to stay alive. I don’t want to die tonight in a nest of vampires.

  A nest of the undead.

  Undead. My own daughter…

  A shaft of red sunlight poured through the open lobby windows. The day was pushing out the night. He felt as if he were moving through a dream, colors changing, darkness giving way to bright light.