"Glasses", I hissed, trying to hold my head up without it rolling off my shoulders.
"Idiot," the surgeon diagnosed.
Someone perched the frames on my face, and I opened my eyes. The light was still harsh, but manageable. I didn't study the new stains on my medical team's scrubs but looked past them to where Mom sat. She still didn't smile, but there was a gleam of triumph in her baby blues.
It was done.
Mel hadn’t budged, still on duty.
Evy paced back and forth behind them, her expression just this side of murderous. Faded mascara circled her puffy manic eyes, and the state of her blond mane suggested she was coming off a week-long bender during which copious amounts of recreational substances had been used with unprecedented results. Retribution would be swift and terrible for putting her through this.
Nore contented herself with a small Mona Lisa smile.
“May I see a mirror?”
The nurse pulled a hand mirror with whorls etched into a pink plastic frame from the lower shelf of the cart and handed it to me. My fingers felt clumsy as I peered into it, slightly surprised that I recognized myself. There was some swelling in my cheeks and mouth, but otherwise, nothing had changed.
I grimaced, inspecting my teeth. They were all present and accounted for, if a little gory around the edges. Mentally, I searched for tiny muscles that never appeared in anatomy textbooks...and found them. With a gentle snick, a pair of slender fangs shot out from under my gums and glided over the slick contours between my lateral incisors and canines.
They were a perfect color match.
"The material is home-grown," the surgeon explained woodenly. “There is nothing artificial in your head, no stitches that need to be removed, nothing major left to heal — but maybe wait a few hours before brushing your teeth. The Agency could autopsy you tomorrow and be assured that your cold, lifeless corpse belonged to an unfortunate but upstanding member of the Community.”
Charming. More to the point, liberating. The Community outlawed ‘witchcraft’, but vampires were welcome.
The nurse made a sharp, sudden movement so that the glaring light and empty shadows engulfed him in equal measure, painting him in Rorschach blots. A yank on his mask and his own much more prominent bicuspids were beautifully silhouetted.
“Congratulations on your rising,” he purred softly.
Suddenly, he was looming over me. I hadn't seen him move.
"We have upheld our end of the bargain. Your turn.”
I smiled at my reflection, turning my head left, then right, inspecting the craftsmanship. My fangs were flawless.
“Indeed.”
Unwillingly, I set the mirror aside and took off my glasses, bracing myself. The world fractured into chaos — a meld of gloom and glow, solid objects stretching into impossible shapes and mind-numbing panoramas overlaying the garage. A sheen rippled off gossamer webs connecting everything real and unreal, each thread pulsing with energy. It took a few moments for my mind to make sense of it.
When it finally did, I noted that one outer-world resident stared, for lack of a better word, back at me. He was gargantuan, naked to the waist, and the acres of bare, clammy, gray skin on display were textured with ritualistic scarring. His head was missing a face. His dank hide stretched over where eyes, nostrils, ears, and a mouth ought to be. Yet, somehow, he was aware of us. He followed every stray noise on our end of existence, swaying as though curious — even though sound couldn't...shouldn't...travel between planes.
A dull ache blossomed behind my right eye, a reminder to get a move on. Dabbling in the beyond was not without risk — it was more than the human mind was designed to accept. And attempting to manipulate the ley lines when I hadn't even gotten a handle on the post-op drool was exquisitely stupid.
I took a deep breath and lifted my hands, weaving to create intricate patterns as ley energy began to curdle around me. The movements were unnecessary — just window dressing. Practitioners, conjurers, sorcerers, diablerists — whatever word you fancied — we understood the inherent magic of the theater and capitalized on it. Mystique was just another shield.
I was rewarded for my efforts when the real vampires’ jaws dropped. My eyes had lit with white fire, causing the throb in my head to strengthen. I'm photosensitive. External light was bad enough; internal light was simply masochistic. The choreography was familiar, though, and I needed familiarity for what I was about to attempt.
A radiance rolled under my skin, erupting into a million will-o'-the-wisps fluttering through my veins. My dreadlocks came alive, floating around and coiling over each other like luminous snakes. Working the light show, I rose to the tips of my toes, ascending until I was cradled two feet above the floor, basking in the splendor of my special effects.