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Long in the Tooth
Long in the Tooth
Long in the Tooth
Ebook115 pages1 hour

Long in the Tooth

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Why are centuries-old vampires always falling for high school girls? Wouldn't they want someone closer their own age?

Cornelius Van Hoyk has been a member of the charmingly undead since 1869. Has he held a passing fancy for a target of his sanguine pursuits? Of course, but it's been years. Today's young women simply do not appeal. Youth is wasted on the young, they say, and his time is wasted on "#them." But what's to be done? A vampire must eat, and an attractive young man must pursue beautiful, malleable young women...

But when Cornelius meets his latest conquest's grandmother, all bets are off. Dorothy Leigh is everything he ever wanted in a woman: intelligent, mature, witty... experienced. But convincing Dorothy to see him for the sesquicentennial man he is on the inside and not the buff and virile stud he appears on the outside will prove a challenge. How do you woo a woman who's been around the block and knows every trick in the book?

By writing a new book, of course.
 

Long in the Tooth is a romantic novella meant as a light-hearted response to an unfortunate trend, written by an author who might be aging out the young-woman age bracket. Might be.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 9, 2020
ISBN9798224555970
Long in the Tooth
Author

Killian McRae

Killian McRae would tell you that she is a rather boring lass, an authoress whose characters' lives are so much more exciting than her own. She would be right. Sadly, this sarcastic lexophile leads a rather mundane existence in the San Francisco Bay Area. She once dreamed of being the female Indiana Jones, and to that end she earned a degree in Middle Eastern History from the University of Michigan. However, when she learned that real archaeologists spend more time lovingly removing dust with toothbrushes from shards of pottery than outrunning intriguing villains with exotic accents, she decided to become a writer instead. She writes across many genres, including science fiction, fantasy, romance, and historical fiction.

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    Long in the Tooth - Killian McRae

    CHAPTER ONE

    Cornelius Van Hoyk of the Amherst Van Hoyks had tired of man-eating women even before he’d been a woman-eating man. Born to an era of social upheaval, war, and social mobility via the altar, the opportunity he’d been presented for everlasting life as a blood sucking vampire, free of society’s constraints and the parade of paramours his mother presented wholesale, proved a fruit too ripe not to pick. Only after becoming a member of the undead did he realize that mortals had no concept of what eternity truly meant.

    Einstein approached it with his explanation of relativity. When you sit with a pretty girl for two hours you think it's only a minute, but when you sit on a hot stove for a minute you think it's two hours.

    When you suffered an evening attempting to seduce a woman assigned to you by your vampiric overlord through a diatribe of meaningless conversation and faux flattery... That was forever. It was the amount of time a self-absorbed beauty could prattle on about things immaterial and ephemeral to the point of exasperation.

    Truth be told, Panthora Leigh did not impress as a bad person. The women Brutus selected for him rarely were. She was, however, possessing of a depth detectable only with a microscope. Having rendezvoused outside the doors of Terra Descura, which Panthora informed him was vegan, organic, and all locally sourced, Cornelius understood immediately the misfortune in store. If one intended to host a vampire, it would never be accomplished by patronizing an establishment that boasted of its lack of meat. Luckily, the menu with which Cornelius was concerned was not the one handed to him by the maître d’ in a cheap suit, but that which sat across the table from him in an even cheaper cocktail dress.

    Speaking of... had mortals grown so arrogant in the face of winter winds that young woman could walk about the streets with such little clothing? In his day, any such maiden who’d presented herself as such did so only in the seediest parts of town, and never with the intention of such rags staying on very long.

    Cornelius examined the limited options. Any suggestions?

    Panthora’s menu flattened across the table. Don’t know. Never been here before.

    An awkward smile spread across his lips. Apologies, I thought perhaps... as you were the one who suggested it...

    Panthora cut him off by blowing a raspberry. I can’t afford a place like this. She resumed study of the menu. But Didi Filmore said the tofu tartare is to die for.

    He dropped his menu and lifted his eyes. Sorry, who?

    "Oh, my god, you don’t know Didi Filmore? She’s just, like, the most famous vegan cuisine blogger in the country. You totally should follow her."

    Follow her where?

    Panthora fixed him with a blank stare. Online?

    Oh, she journals on the world wide web. The newly-arrived waiter leaned in to see the item on the menu to which Cornelius pointed. Oh, yes, I’ve heard of that. I’m sorry, I don’t spend much time on the... the, um, information superhighway?—though I wholly understand the convenience of having so much accessible to you on a whim via a pocket telephone. Call me a luddite, but I still prefer my reading materials on paper.

    Call you a what? Panthora blinked thrice in rapid succession.

    A luddite?

    Panthora stabbed the house salad just set before her with a three-pronged fork. I don’t label people, Corny—

    "It’s Cornelius, actually."

    —and I don’t think the luddites think their name should be used as an insult.

    Cornelius’s face screwed up as the waiter deposited a bowl of green with splotches of purple, red, and white before him. He didn’t care for the green, but the other colors reminded him of more luscious cuisine: that of a young maiden’s blood and the sweet buzz of her submission as his fangs pierced her neck. The blood would feed his body, and the energy gathered from the surrender would channel through him and sate his master.

    Funny, as many rumors as he’d encountered about mortals’ understanding of vampirism, never had he found one who deduced that it was, in fact, a pyramid scheme. Maybe the original pyramid scheme, as vampires’ own mythos suggested their origins traced back to that far-flung and long-buried land. Since time immemorial, handsome youths had been drawn into the fray by a charismatic master, one who promised them eternal life in exchange for the monthly draw of a victim’s submission. Panthora was only the latest of Cornelius’s century and a half of conquests, a parade of malleable young women stretching back to the freshly postbellum shores of New England. Or so, they had once been malleable. But his current quest was the latest example of some inherent change of culture. As though they’d scaled a mighty peak, the females to which he’d been assigned as late lacked in both sophistication and compassion, confusing opinion with education and becoming, in short, willful, presumptive, and materialistic.

    But that didn’t make Panthora’s blood any less delicious. It just made it harder to attain.

    Cornelius smiled as he cleared his throat. Right, time to try a different tack. If he wanted to keep Panthora’s good humor, correcting her ignorance was hardly the way.

    He picked up his fork. Quite right. Do forgive me. I’m afraid my work in Central America has left me somewhat estranged from polite society as late.

    A sliver of her disgust sluiced away. What work?

    Oh, various good deeds. Most recently, I helped build a school deep in the jungle. I’m afraid I may have picked up some courser language in the process, but a small cost to pay for doing so much good.

    He’d speculated that a person who followed the writings of a local food snoot would be seduced by humanitarian work, and it seemed he was right. The hard lines of Panthora’s face softened.

    Yeah, well... Her eyes lost focus. Building a school, huh?

    The village’s first. He leaned in. "Tell you the truth? I may have been the one there volunteering, but I’m the one who really was helped. What those children did to me with their smiles and appreciation!"

    I’m sure they really appreciated some rich foreigner coming to bleach out his guilt with some meaningless token.

    Cornelius’s sense of hearing trumped any mortal’s, but sometimes words could fail to convey understanding. Sorry?

    Panthora fixed him with an acidic glare. Are you seriously one of those people who thinks it helps the poor when someone storms into a town and throws up a few ramshackle buildings? Walls without ways! Did you learn nothing from #InstitutionalizedPoverty?

    I’m afraid I’m not familiar with the concept, no.

    Of course, you’re not. She slid the napkin from her lap and covered the remnants of her salad with it, pushing it away like it had personally insulted her. You know what, Corny—

    "Cornelius."

    —I don’t think this is going to work. Even if you are hot, I’m not going to waste my time on an elitist bigot.

    His eyes turned to saucers. "I’m elitist? Because I made time to travel on my own dime and help the poor?"

    He didn’t, and he hadn’t, but it was the principle of the thing.

    She crossed her arms and gawked at him. "No, it’s because you think you are the answer to the world’s problems, even though you are the world’s problem. I mean, you picked me up in an SUV. An SUV, for the love of Gwyneth Paltrow, her hand slapped the table, and not even a hybrid one!"

    But you said when we arranged this that you didn’t have a car. I gladly would have walked the two miles from your house to this place!

    Cornelius turned back in on himself when he realized he’d raised his voice, even hooking the baited gazes of some nearby diners. He coughed into his fist, leaned over the table, and softened his tone, trying to remember the prizes he sought. He might be able to steal her blood, but her submission required wooing.

    Panthora, please... He took one of her hands in his, stroking his thumb over her knuckles. "I openly admit to my faults. I do not stay abreast of changing norms, nor do I consume social media, and I often ignore fashion and anything trendy. I do, indeed, come from wealth, and that results in my ability to feel enabled to help people, without regard to what help they actually need or, lo

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