THE PROTECTORATE:
PATRIARCH
By
Dana Warryck
© copyright 2006, Dana Warryck
Unedited excerpt
This is a work of fiction. All characters,
events, and places are of the author’s imagination and not
to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons
or events is merely coincidence.
CHAPTER 1
Aiden Marschant sat motionless in a darkened corner booth
at Smokey's Roadhouse, trying to ignore the stench of stale
beer and burnt barbeque. The dirty plank wood floor beneath
his boots vibrated with karaoke country music. He glowered
at the stage twenty feet away as the crowd howled and booed
at a fat drunk in slouching jeans slobbering on the mike
while wailing off-tune like a bobcat caught in a bear trap.
Aiden tuned out the noise and focused his attention on a
young woman seated at the bar.
Pretty, with cascading brown curls and a ready smile, she
wore a low-cut stretchy pink shirt and skin-tight jeans.
She flirted skillfully, but Aiden knew she was out of her
element, seated next to Cameron Ryben doing his best imitation
of a smooth one-night stand. She had no idea what Cam Ryben
really wanted.
Aiden narrowed his eyes at Ryben. A handsome blond of medium
build, Ryben fancied himself a slick predator above the
laws of their people. A gifted amateur, he had received
some training within the Protectorate until he'd gone rogue.
Now he was nothing more than a rutting animal letting his
bloodlust run rampant as he mauled his way through humanity,
leaving a trail of dead bodies like a crazed grizzly. Aiden
had tracked him across four states, catching up to him in
this grungy backwoods roadhouse outside Paducah.
Ryben glanced around as if sensing he was being watched.
Aiden momentarily eased out of sight until Ryben relaxed
and turned back to his mark, whispering something in her
ear. She squirmed on her barstool and giggled, then stood
unsteadily. Ryben took her by the arm and guided her to
the door.
Aiden followed a discreet distance behind until a huge
mound of a woman with stringy brown hair stumbled up from
her chair and blocked his path. Poured into jeans and a
tee shirt big enough to make a circus tent, she yelled obscenities
at a beefy, red-bearded man seated at her table. Aiden dodged
the woman as she staggered against a nearby table, raising
protests from patrons whose drinks threatened to tip over.
Her equally inebriated companion lunged at Aiden and roared,
"Watch it, asshole!" Aiden shoved past the couple
and barged outside.
He leapt off the wooden front porch, into the cool, foggy
spring night. The heavy plank door slammed shut behind him,
muffling the music still reverberating inside. Frogs chirped
in the distance as he darted along the haphazard rows of
beat-up cars and pickups parked out front. He couldn't see
Ryben or the girl anywhere. Stopping, he stilled his anxiousness
and opened his mind to get a fix on Ryben. Immediately a
sickening wave of hunger and lust washed over him like a
blast of hot water. The scent of warm blood saturated the
air, and the amphibian concert stopped. He'd screwed up.
He was too late!
Running to the parking lot at the back of the building,
he spotted a car with the dome light on. He found the girl
sprawled on the gravel like a discarded rag doll, her head
twisted aside, and a jagged hole torn in her throat. Her
pink top glistened dark red as blood gushed and pooled around
her. Aiden snorted at the cloying smell of death, careful
not to inhale deeply.
The keys still dangled from the driver's door of the car
Aiden assumed belonged to the murdered girl. With both the
front and rear doors hanging open, the car's dome light
glowed like a macabre nightlight on the bloodshed. Ryben,
in his usual fashion, had ripped open his victim's throat.
But he must have sensed he was being tracked - he'd fled
without fulfilling his sexual urges and feasting on the
spoils. Aiden knew he'd kill again before the night was
done. Cursing, Aiden opened his mind and scanned the area,
but knew Ryben was gone.
Hearing voices, Aiden glanced back at the roadhouse and
saw two men approaching in the neon-illuminated fog. He
couldn't afford to be seen near this body. Wrapping himself
in calm, he assumed the mental cloak of near invisibility
that allowed him to move unnoticed among humans. The men
didn't look his way.
He turned to leave but stopped when a faint sound like
a kitten's mew came from the rear seat of the car. He glanced
at the two men coming closer, then ducked down to peer inside,
avoiding the bloody handprints smeared across the top edge
of the door opening.
He froze and sucked in a swift breath. Sweet Mother
Earth! The bundle strapped in a car seat, a silken-haired
cherub wearing a pink sleeper, yawned with her plump arms
askew.
Straightening in shock, Aiden glanced at the two men opening
the doors of a pickup five cars down. They didn't seem to
notice anything amiss, but with his concentration shaken
he couldn't be sure they hadn't spotted him.
He wanted to turn and walk away, but the baby inside the
car whined. How could he leave? If he'd been more attentive,
he might have prevented her mother's murder. Still, he couldn't
stick around and get involved unless Ryben was lurking in
the area with his urges dampened, waiting for the opportunity
to strike again. Could the child be in danger from him?
The bloody handprints smeared above the rear doorframe suggested
Ryben had noticed her.
Aiden grimaced and dared another look inside the car. The
baby sat alone, defenseless, strapped in her car seat, with
no one to protect her.
You are a Protector.
He shook his head and straightened. Humans had their own
government agencies to handle these situations and would
place the child with relatives or other proper guardians.
He had no business taking responsibility for this tiny human.
He wasn't equipped for such things. His life had no room
for a baby.
He turned to the sound of an engine starting. The men in
the truck drove out of the parking lot. The roadhouse's
neon sign blinked like a beacon in the mist. He glanced
down at the body lying in the pool of blood spreading near
his feet. He couldn't afford to be caught standing over
a dead woman, or stick around to answer questions from the
police and destroy the anonymity required for his work.
He looked at the building again, hoping someone would find
the victim and report her murder. But how long before they
did? In the meantime, what would become of the baby? He
couldn't very well leave her sitting in the car unattended
for hours.
Yes, he could. It wasn't his responsibility, it wasn't his
duty.
But you're a Protector.
The frogs resumed their rhythmic song. A coyote yipped
in the distance, and a chorus joined in, seeming to surround
him. Aiden swiped a hand across his mouth. The child cried
out, and the sound tugged at something inside him he hadn't
realized was there - something he'd worked all his life
to ensure would never be there. Obviously his efforts had
gone unrewarded. He felt that twinge of compassion twisting
in his chest and knew what he must do.
Oh, hell.
He took a handkerchief from his leather jacket and, careful
to avoid brushing against the bloodied doorframe, leaned
inside the back of the car. Wrestling with the seat belt
strung through the baby's seat, he tried not to leave fingerprints
as a clue that might link him with this murder-kidnapping.
But he hadn't murdered the woman, and this wasn't kidnapping.
He was just taking the baby for safekeeping. As soon as
he could, he'd make sure she was placed with the proper
human authorities.
The baby fidgeted and looked up at him, running her chubby
fingers across his hair dangling in front of her. He glanced
at her wide blue eyes full of curious, trusting innocence,
then reached for the car seat. His hands froze mid-motion.
If this wasn't kidnapping, what was it? Who was he trying
to fool?
When he withdrew his hands, the child screwed up her rosy
face and whimpered. Was she hungry? Wet? He touched her
cheek and found her hot, almost feverish. Was she sick?
Good grief, he didn't know anything about taking care of
a baby! And Noel and Marta wouldn't appreciate having the
responsibility dumped on them. That would be like asking
two Rottweilers to baby-sit. What was he thinking?
As he reached to refasten the seat belt and leave the child
just as he found her, she grabbed his index finger. His
insides melted, and he let himself smile. "You're in
a lot of trouble, sweet thing, and you have no idea, do
you?" His smile turned to a frown when he wondered
what would happen to this child inside the state system,
assuming she survived long enough to be shunted into it.
He didn't want to think about that.
The waif cried louder. He looked over his shoulder, hoping
the music filtering outside the roadhouse would drown out
her caterwauling. If only he could go back to the bar and
report the murder without getting himself involved ... but
he couldn't. Damn it!
You're a Protector. You do what must be done.
In a blinding flash he grabbed the car seat, the diaper
bag, and the stuffed pink rabbit no bigger than his fist.
With the baby in her seat tucked securely under his arm,
he backed out of the car. He caught sight of the bloody
wallet lying near the woman's body and used his handkerchief
to retrieve it. Maybe he could find some information inside,
later.
Hugging his newfound charge close to his chest, he paced
toward the line of trees glistening in the misty darkness
beyond the parking lot. At the edge of the trees his dark
blue rental sedan waited. He unlocked the doors, stowed
the baby in the back seat and secured her, then dived for
the driver's seat. Starting the car, he resisted the urge
to peel out of the parking lot in a fast getaway.
The baby wailed, and her anguished gaze met his in the
rearview mirror. "Hush, little one. You'll be all right."
She calmed at the sound of his voice - an effect he could
induce at will. He smiled then shook his head and frowned.
"You'll be all right, but will I? Right now, I'm having
serious doubts."
* * * * *
At 2:17 a.m., County Sheriff's Deputy Shanna Preston eyed
Darryl Goggins, the bartender on duty at Smokey's Roadhouse
when the murder had occurred. Skinny and scruffy, he wore
a sleeveless black tee shirt with a Goth band emblem emblazoned
across the chest - a skull and scythe. She wondered about
his drug of choice. Meth? Judging by the way his eyes had
sunk into their sockets and his teeth had turned askew,
she figured that was it. A damned semi-rural epidemic.
Despite his suspected drugged-out stated, he'd given a
solid description of the man who'd left with nineteen-year-old
Melody Jean Hanks just before she'd been killed. Medium
build, height about six feet. Wavy, shoulder-length, honey-blond
hair. Dark eyes, maybe brown. No visible scars. Good looking,
'if you're into guys,' which the bartender assured her he
was not.
She snapped her report pad shut. "Okay, Mr. Goggins.
If you remember anything else, be sure to give me a call."
She handed him a business card, a precious commodity she'd
fought hard to get ... like the respect of her peers. She
stifled a sneer.
Back at the station the men treated her as a joke - too
new to know anything about 'real police work,' and too young
and pretty to be a deputy for the McCracken County Sheriff's
Department. They judged her by her petite package, but they
didn't know her at all. She wagered she could outshoot any
of them, and she knew some special moves that would help
her kick their strutting, good-ol'-boy asses in a fair fight.
She would change her situation one step at a time, and doing
her job well was part of that plan.
But sometimes doing a good job was more difficult than
she expected, especially when she felt like gagging. It
wasn't that she'd never seen a dead body before. Having
to identify her parents after their car accident was the
worst nightmare she could possibly imagine. But when she
and Jake took a look at Miss Hanks' body, she was lucky
not to toss her cookies. She suspected some coyote had wandered
over to the body and eaten away part of the throat before
the two customers leaving the bar had discovered it. But
Jake had insisted with a gleam in his eyes that this was
the work of the man dubbed by the media as 'The Bloodsucker,'
wanted in four states for the gruesome murders of over forty
women in the past few months.
She couldn't deny Melody Hanks' murder bore garish similarities
to the MO of The Bloodsucker. The possibility that the infamous
serial killer had relocated his operation to Paducah made
Shanna a teensy bit leery of stepping outside alone in the
dark.
"Well, there was somethin' else," Goggins volunteered
after a moment, bringing Shanna back from her musing. "I
mean, somebody else who kinda caught my attention."
Shanna flipped open her report pad and prepared to jot
down additional notes. No telling what tiny detail might
become important later. "Go on, Mr. Goggins,"
she urged in a friendly tone, chastising herself for letting
Jake pull her chain about some insane serial killer. Why
would he come to Paducah? She winced inwardly when the answer
echoed in her mind ... why wouldn't he? There were plenty
of potential victims available here, just like any other
small city embedded in a rural area. Maybe he thought the
police force wouldn't be prepared. And he maybe he was right.
"Well, it was probably nothin'," Goggins mumbled.
"But there was this other guy..."
Shanna zeroed her eyes on him. "At the bar?"
Goggins shook his head of drab, scraggly dishwater-blond
hair. "Nope. He just sort of appeared all of a sudden
in the middle of the tables. I didn't remember seein' him
until that blond dude was walkin' out the door with the
girl that got killed."
"Why did this second man catch your attention?"
"He looked like he was in a hurry. You know, like
he was followin' the guy and the girl." Goggins shrugged
his bony shoulders. "At least that's what it seemed
like. He bumped into some folks at a table, and they raised
a ruckus. Then he rushed out."
Shanna warmed with excitement. Another possible lead. "Could
you describe this man?"
Goggins shrugged again. "It was kinda dark, and I
didn't get a good look at him. But he was tall. Like over
six feet. He had really long, dark hair, and a black leather
jacket."
"Motorcycle jacket?"
"Longer. More like a coat. About knee-length."
Shanna smiled. A better description than she'd expected.
"Anything else?"
Goggins shook his head.
"Okay. Thanks for your cooperation, Mr. Goggins. We
may want to contact you again later."
He grinned. "Sure thing - if it's you doin' the contactin'."
Smiling evenly, Shanna ignored the heavy hint and closed
her pad. She turned to Deputy Jake Millhouse interviewing
a couple sitting at a nearby table. He towered over them,
big and imposing with his shaved head and holstered sidearm.
Everybody in the bar seemed very cooperative - probably
hoping they wouldn't get tagged with a DUI on the way home.
Jake closed his pad and strolled toward her. "All
done here, Preston?"
Shanna nodded. "The bartender gave me the names of
two regulars who left just after the victim and her escort.
He also mentioned another possible suspect and gave me a
description."
Jake nodded. "Okay, we'll question the regulars later.
The meat truck's already gone, so I guess the coroner's
finished. Let's go outside and see how they're wrapping
things up."
Shanna followed Jake outside, annoyed to see a dark-colored,
late-model sedan parked askew in the lot near the victim's
car. Government issue. When she spied the suits swarming
around like locusts, she knew the local FBI branch was on
the job. Her enthusiasm for the case faded. The agents would
take the information she and Jake had gathered, then dismiss
them as bumbling amateurs. Damn! This was their case,
their turf, and she had as much right as anyone else to
help catch the bastard who did this. But she knew she'd
never get the chance. Single and permanently relegated to
the night shift, all she'd ever handle were domestic-disturbance
interventions, Saturday night DUI roadblocks, and emergency
traffic calls. She knew she was capable of more - so much
more.
She sighed, shaking her head as she walked to her patrol
car. She felt for the victim's family, knowing what it meant
to lose loved ones to violent death. She wanted to be more
than just a shadow doing cleanup work in the background.
But what else could she do? No one could change what had
happened here tonight. The only way she'd be of service
to herself, the victim's family, and the community was to
help take down this vicious animal and make sure he didn't
kill again. Somehow she had to stay on this case, whether
the FBI liked it or not.
The Sheriff's Department was entitled to send a representative
to interface with the FBI on this case. She just hoped she
could convince Sheriff Grainger she was worthy of the job.
And maybe, for once, he'd give her a break and let her choose
her own assignment - one that could actually mean something
for a change.
Yeah, right. Fat chance. She'd have a better luck getting
hit by lightning in a snowstorm. Still, she had to try.
She unlocked her patrol car then stopped to look around
at the trees towering in the damp mist. Dismissing the edginess
tightening her shoulders, she slid in behind the wheel and
shut the door. She'd talk to Grainger tomorrow, as soon
as the morning shift started.
#
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