Dr. Vampyre by S.N. McKibben - Book Tour + Giveaway
Dr. Vampyre
by
S.N. McKibben
S.N. McKibben
Genre:
Paranormal Romance
Paranormal Romance
When a college professor is blackmailed by a student …
… he has to walk the fine line of being true to his principles and not
letting his bloody secret out.
letting his bloody secret out.
Dr. John Tennison, professor and physician, wakes up every morning and
counts his spoons—a measure of how many tasks he feels he can
accomplish during his day. One spoon to walk down the stairs, one
spoon to teach a class, one spoon to deal with tardy students. Lupus
limits him, but he still gives lectures and works at a hospital. He
also makes time for friends, and once a week visits Sanguine Loon’s
to sate—or subvert—his one strange desire. His nemesis, the one
thing besides lupus that keeps him from leading a normal life, is the
blood at the bottom of a little paper Dixie cup.
counts his spoons—a measure of how many tasks he feels he can
accomplish during his day. One spoon to walk down the stairs, one
spoon to teach a class, one spoon to deal with tardy students. Lupus
limits him, but he still gives lectures and works at a hospital. He
also makes time for friends, and once a week visits Sanguine Loon’s
to sate—or subvert—his one strange desire. His nemesis, the one
thing besides lupus that keeps him from leading a normal life, is the
blood at the bottom of a little paper Dixie cup.
While Tennison’s blood-drinking habit is a secret, it’s well known that
he’s the campus asshole and has no tolerance for students who show
up late. When he kicks Vogue model Ylati Badashi out of his lecture
hall for wandering in ten minutes late, she’s having none of it.
She pouts, she seduces, she blackmails, and puts Tennison at odds
with his butler, and finally she tells him the truth about why she
needs to be in his class.
he’s the campus asshole and has no tolerance for students who show
up late. When he kicks Vogue model Ylati Badashi out of his lecture
hall for wandering in ten minutes late, she’s having none of it.
She pouts, she seduces, she blackmails, and puts Tennison at odds
with his butler, and finally she tells him the truth about why she
needs to be in his class.
Tennison is a man of principles, and though he swears he won’t change his
mind, he starts to react unexpectedly to Ylati even as he hates her
for making him suspicious of his trusted butler. Tennison has to find
out where Mitch goes on his nights off and must deal with a budding
attraction to a woman he occasionally hates, all while learning new
secrets about himself. It’s going to take a lot of spoons.
mind, he starts to react unexpectedly to Ylati even as he hates her
for making him suspicious of his trusted butler. Tennison has to find
out where Mitch goes on his nights off and must deal with a budding
attraction to a woman he occasionally hates, all while learning new
secrets about himself. It’s going to take a lot of spoons.
Scroll up and help the doctor count his spoons!
Today, I woke up with nineteen spoons instead of
twenty-two. Not literal spoons—figurative.
I don’t go to bed placing utensils on my face or twirl the family silver from
my extremities. Such behavior would insult my Mensa-acceptable 133 IQ.
The spoon theory
is a fellow sufferer’s explanation of what it’s like to live with lupus. Spoons represent how much energy I
have before I begin to deteriorate, and I am grateful to each and every one of
them. Every spoon I wake up
with means I can do that many tasks. Tasks like walking down the stairs, teaching
my class, seeing patients. The type of things others take for granted.
When my students in the blood cell biology class at the
University of Southern California inquire about my condition, I describe lupus
as a life-sucking force in which you have to constantly balance your time and
energy against the downhill spiral of lethargy and pain. My explanation usually
stops anyone from asking more questions. As if not talking about my condition
will make the disease go away.
The pain used to anger me. Succumbing to a body that jails my
actions is a study in humiliation. Worse is knowing lupus affects more women
than it does men. Some call it a woman’s disease. Being a man, you might think
that is what bothers me. What bothers me is I don’t like to see women in pain.
Knowing what they are going through helps me as a doctor, but as a man, it
doesn’t help my psyche.
You see why I strive for a logical life. Emotion takes so much
energy that it’s better not to feel. In fact, suppressing any emotion is key to
my success. It doesn’t stop the pain lupus gives me. Nothing stops the pain
except one unnatural addiction, and that only for a brief moment. So with my
shield of apathy and my sword of cynicism, I venture forth into the morning to
heal and teach as a doctor and professor.
You’d think I would slow down or take it easy today knowing that
I’ve already begun without my usual amount of spoons, but today is the first day of a new semester and I won’t
be late. Never, in my nine years of teaching, have I ever been late. Besides, I
can’t let those beemer brats wreak havoc in my lecture hall, now can I?
The one indulgence that would solve my lethargy problems flits
through my brain. I resolve to shove that thought out. Anything not normal,
right now, is not in the plan.
***
I stroll into my lecture hall at exactly nine fifty a.m. and the
whispers stop. Old and new faces attentively follow my shuffle as I round my
desk to the dry erase board at the front of the room. I pick up a marker that
could make any fifth grader swear off glue and write Dr. Tennison - Blood cell biology.
Thankfully, the counselors and older co-eds let it be known that
I am “a real dick” and have an aversion to those who are not on time. So,
I rolled my eyes when at ten minutes after ten, she of the model-thin body, sporting six-inch stilettos, tight
jeans, and a frou-frou blouse, walked in.
“Ms. Tardy, don‘t bother.”
She gave me the oh-gosh-I’m-really-sorry face. “Are there
any more seats?”
“Not for you. Please, don’t waste our time. I don’t take
add-ons.” I reached under my desk for the medical book I would use to assist in
today’s lecture.
“But, I registered for the class.” Ms. Tardy pouted.
“I don’t care. You’re late. No more room. Get out.” The slam of
the thousand-page medical dictionary I tossed on my desk should have been
enough articulation in my statement for her to leave.
“I got here as soon as I could!” Her whine climbed the scale
into annoyance territory.
“Which is not good enough. You’re done.” I pointed at the door.
“Get out.”
“Oh come on. What could I have missed in five minutes?”
“The point . . .” I flashed my Rolex from under my sleeve and
checked the time. “. . . And it’s been twelve minutes.”
“That’s not fair!”
“What would not be fair is to make a pulmonary patient, lying
open on the table, wait twelve life-or-death
minutes for a replacement valve. I’m here to teach. One of those lessons I
wish to instill is an appreciation for the value of time.”
Ms. Tardy stood there in her tight jeans and pursed lips with a
hand on her hip. She looked familiar, but I couldn’t place her. ”You can
go now.” I waved a hand in a sweeping motion. “There isn’t room for you
anyway.” There were seats in the back, but she looked like a
front-of-the-class, I-want-all-the-attention kind of girl.
“But I pre-registered.” She used her hands for emphasis and
struck a classic pose that probably got her into any club or out of any trouble
she came up against.
Snorting out my disgust, a glimmer of recognition hit me and I
looked harder at Ms. Tardy.
This face before me belonged to Ylati Badashi, the recently
“retired” model, and her million dollar Vogue
body was in my lecture hall. She must have taken my fluster of disdain for
admiration, because her supposedly non-collagen-filled lips curved. But it was
that I-have-you-now twinkle in her
eye that jostled loose my wrath.
I whisked my walking cane from under my desk. Quick as a turtle
in sand, I advanced on her with my geriatric, cane-wielding old man shtick,
trying to scare her off my lawn. The fear in her eyes fueled my words. “Get out
of my hall!”
I was seething by the time she turned tail and bolted out of the
room. She looked like a shackled cat running from the spray of a hose. The
image brought tears of laughter to my eyes. It had been a while since I’d
laughed that hard. I’m sure my students never see me so much as smile.
Even though I knew the price for expressing my emotion would
cost me another spoon and wreak havoc on me later, I couldn’t help the
satisfied feeling of living up to my so earned title among the students, Dr.
Asshole.
“Dr. Tennison, are you alright?” One of my more faithful
students, Ms. Phillips, actually sounded concerned.
I returned to my drab demeanor, leaned heavily on my cane, and
grunted an acknowledgment to the third-year co-ed. My physical display allowed
the monster of lupus inside me to seek retribution and sap away my energy.
Disgruntled for wasting precious vitality on a fritter of a person, I forced
down my angry self-reprimand. There was no use getting angry over getting
angry.
I resumed my emotionless state and taught as I have for the past
nine years—with ruthless abandon. No whining, no excuses, and if you’re late,
you fail. If you can’t beat my turtle-ass to class, you’re wasting my time,
your time, and everybody else’s time.
***
After teaching all day, I was down to thirteen spoons. Three spent starting my day:
one for teaching class, one for each trip walking to the car, and one for the
gallant ass-chewing I gave to Ms. Tardy. When I get down to five spoons, it’s time to think about
calling it a day, but I wasn’t there yet.
Mitch, my butler and savior for most my life, picked me up in
the blue BMW Alpina. I have never had the privilege of driving it. The DMV
denied me a license because of my condition. I did have the honor of paying for
it. If you were to ask me, Mitch had a damn nice car to chauffeur me around in.
I called Mitch not only my savior, but also jokingly, my wife.
Without him, my life would be impossible. He cooked my food, did my laundry,
dropped off and picked up the dry cleaning, scrubbed the house to the point of
peeling off paint, scheduled my day, tidied the yard, took some phone calls for
me, and made sure I take my medication. I did stop him from wiping my
ass—occasionally. Okay, so I’m joking about the last part. He doesn’t wipe my
ass, but what unmarried guy in his thirties is going to deny the rest? If sex
weren’t involved, I’d marry him. Sure, he’s an adorable thirty-nine year old in
a small stout package with dark hair and soft dark eyes, but that’s not how I
roll. I’m pretty sure that’s not how he rolls, either.
Off we go to the medical center with Mitch at the wheel and me
in the back seat orienting myself with the next class session. Mitch is quite
the chatty type, but I’ve learned to drown him out as any good husband would
do. Routinely, after the days I teach, he drops me at the hospital where I
work. My assistant nurse, Mary, is the old battle ram of the team—wise enough
to tell patients to be here an hour early, kind enough to be the matron of
compassion, knowledgeable enough to know what to do if ever I seize from pain.
She leads me to the five-minute staff review and then my first
patient of the day. I’m handed a clipboard and being a doctor, I read the case
symptoms first. Yes, it’s bad to look at what’s wrong with the person before
looking at the name, but we all do it. I wish I had looked at the name before I walked in the patient room, but it
was too late to walk the other way when I opened the door.
“Ms. Badashi.” Smooth as a virgin dry-erase board, I did not
give away one iota of the seething hate boiling through my veins to Ms. Tardy.
“It says here you have all the symptoms of river blindness. What would you
prescribe yourself?”
“Ivermectin.” The big brown eyed lost puppy look of hers could
have cracked a walnut. That’s when the pain behind my right eye surged. Was the
eye torture from her annoyingly correct answer, or lupus? I couldn’t tell. “Do
you have river blindness?”
“Please let me into your class.”
The audacity! “Am I to believe that my staff bumped you to my
first patient when there are real people in need of my services?”
“Hey!” She actually looked put out. “I am a real person. I am in
need of your services!” Again she was wasting my time. You’re late, you fail.
“You, young lady, are a fraud. Get out of my office.” I pressed
a palm against my pounding eye. It relieved some of the pressure.
Her whining made my eye worse. “What I need is for you to teach
me Blood cell biology.”
“Why me?” I said more to myself than to anyone else.
“Because you’re the best.”
Mitch says flattery will get you anywhere. Yes, there is appeal
to being called the best. My ego did flutter a little, but not enough to
forgive her cardinal sin number one. With my one hand still pushing back my
right eye, my index finger pointed at the door—hard to do with a clipboard
still in my hand.
“Out!”
She leaned forward; just enough so her frou-frou top’s fringes
hung lose. “I’d do anything to get into your class.”
“Anything?” I smiled and suggestively touched my chest. I did
not fail to notice the pink bra she had on.
She nodded and accentuated, “Anything.”
“Sign up next semester and be early.” I threw the clipboard on
the counter and tried to slam the door on my way out. Too bad hospital doors
didn’t slam. Amazing how my eye felt better after I left her sitting there, but
dealing with her cost me yet another spoon. I had eleven spoons left and I needed to get
through the rest of my five-spoon work day. Fortunately, I didn’t see her
again. I figured that was that.
Mitch picked me up from work at six o’clock. He mentioned Puzo,
the dean of students, called. Randolph Puzo is a good man. Works hard, cared
about the students, and had gone to bat for me in front of the board about my
special condition. He’s the kind of guy you wanted on your team because he did
anything to get the job done right.
“John, how are you?” Randolph’s voice came through my iPhone as
clear and crisp as a new Benjamin.
“I’m fairing well. What can I do for you?”
Now, Randolph knows I can’t waste energy on chit-chat, and being
the good man that he is, he gets to the point.
“John, I have a student that says you chased her out of the
lecture hall.”
“Ah, Ms. Badashi. I was afraid she’d fall in those stilettos for
the vertically challenged.”
“John,” Randolph chuckled, though I was quite serious, “can you
please let her into the class?”
It’s tough and unpopular to be a hardnose, but principles are
principles and I refuse to compromise. “She was late, Puzo.”
“It was the first day of the semester.”
“All my other students arrived early. Even before I did.”
His comment was barely audible. “They got the asshole alert.”
“Excuse me?”
To Randolph’s credit, he was as gracious as he always is. “Mr.
Tennison, I would greatly appreciate it if you forgave this one transgression
and allowed an eager student access to your lectures.”
I should’ve been grateful to Randolph. He’d done so much for me.
If I couldn’t make it to class, he would cover for me. He makes sure my lecture
hall is the closest to the parking lot. I never had to move desks, books or
arrange my classroom during the off season. He’s probably going to catch hell
for me denying a student what seems like her dying wish. But when I thought
about her suggestive comment, thinking her womanly guiles would work on me, my
temper rose to boiling.
“Mr. Puzo, I abide by the school’s program, requirements,
curriculum, and every rule and regulation your fine institution implements.
Please abide by mine.” I hung up and thought the next call would be a request
for my resignation.
Mitch eyed me briefly from the rearview mirror as he was
driving. “Sounds like women troubles.”
“Student issues,” I corrected. I wished he wouldn’t call them
“women troubles,” as he knew I never had so much as a girlfriend. Don’t get me
wrong. I’ve been promiscuous. I went to college. Don’t think that lupus affects
one’s sex drive, because it doesn’t. I just never had time or the energy to
have a steady girl.
“Tim called. Said he’d come to collect you at seven.”
I only had six spoons
left for the rest of the night. But I know what Tim would say if I tried to get
out of going with him tonight. Just come
with us to Loon’s and have a shot and you’ll be fine. Tim wasn’t the type
to let me break routine. The schedule never did me wrong. I had a good life,
just a limited one.
I sighed and rubbed my temples. How could I deny my best friend
since high school? If I didn’t go with him, he’d take every opportunity and
every one of his ambulance-driving skills to annoy the fuck out of me at work
the next day. Anastasia, fellow lupus sufferer and Tim’s girlfriend, would call
me relentlessly and whine in my ear all night. Ever since I can remember,
Wednesday nights belonged to the three of us. It’s hard to break tradition.
By six forty-five, I sat ready in the kitchen of my two-story
house. Tim usually managed to get Anastasia dressed and ready to go out almost
on time. His secret was telling her they had to be there half an hour
beforehand. I could have waited upstairs lying down, but going up and down the
stairs costs me a spoon. I should have moved to a one-story house, but I’d
never sell this home. I’d never be able to replace childhood memories and
nostalgia.
Mitch was wiping down the swirled-granite counters while I sat
at the four-seat mahogany dining set. His time off was Wednesday night and all
of Sunday, fitting perfectly with my schedule. Wednesday I went out with my
friends while Mitch went—wherever he went, and on Sunday he left after
breakfast and returned on Monday before dawn. But he always made sure I was in
safe hands or he could be reached by cell phone before leaving.
I looked at the hundred-year-old Simplex grandfather clock that
hung at the opposite end of the entryway to the kitchen. The hands read
seven-o-five. My fingers drummed on the table as I counted every second that
ticked away. From outside, the sound of Bach booming from distorted speakers
was a sure sign Tim’s Tercel was speeding to my driveway.
Mitch raised his head and folded his towel. “Ah, well, here they
are.”
We both sauntered out of the kitchen to the rap of Tim’s
knuckles on the glass of the window. Mitch grabbed his overnight bag, opened
the door, and nodded a greeting to Tim. I scowled and pointed at my Rolex.
Like me, Tim was white bread. But where I had brown hair, he had
jet black. I wasn’t as pale as he was, though he tended to stay out of the sun
like me. He wore lots of brown and brass and occasionally topped all that
splendor with some hat bearing mechanical constructions. Opposed to my daily
suit and tie tonight, I lost the jacket and noose, but my slacks were pressed
and my button-down collar was appropriate for where we were going.
Tim smiled nervously. He lived up to his nickname of
“Jackrabbit,” bouncing on the balls of his feet. Heavy eyeliner accentuated his
shocking blue eyes, which pleaded forgiveness. “You know Anastasia.”
I gruffed at Tim and waved at Mitch. I always told Mitch he
could take the car, but he insisted on taking the bus. Public transportation
was a block away and he never seemed to mind. I didn’t argue. It would have
been an exercise in futility as “he was always right.” Just like asking him
where he went on Wednesday and Sundays, it was pointless to ask. I stopped
wondering where he spent his time off long ago.
Tim bounded to his four-door Tercel and opened the back
passenger door for me with a flourish. Anastasia hung over the open window of
the front passenger seat. Hourglass figure, impressive chest, thin lips, a
strong nose combined with Bette Davis eyes set wide on a heart-shaped
face—Anastasia was beautiful. Though I couldn’t understand why a natural
redhead dyed her hair auburn. Probably to reap as much attention as possible
from her cardinal red strands. Most men would lie down just for the pleasure of
saying she stepped on them. But she was as crazy as monkey-flung feces. I had
no idea how Tim puts up with her.
“Hi, John.” Anastasia greeted me with a breathy smile and hungry
eyes.
I smiled, took her hand, and kissed it lightly. “Good evening,
Anastasia.”
She giggled and swatted her free hand on Tim’s butt. “How come
you aren’t so charming?”
Tim pivoted around and gingerly took my hand, mimicked my
knuckle-kissing gesture and nailed my professor voice perfectly, “John, how
lovely to see you. Won’t you please get your ass in the car?”
“Whatever, Jackrabbit.” I said, climbing into the trusty Tercel.
I noted that I was down to five spoons
and was leaving the house. But it was unlikely we’ll be out too late.
Slave to a 100 lbs. GSD (German Shepard) and a computer she calls "Dave",
you'll often see her riding a 19 hand Shire nicknamed "Gunny"
to the local coffee shop near the Santa Monica mountains.
you'll often see her riding a 19 hand Shire nicknamed "Gunny"
to the local coffee shop near the Santa Monica mountains.
Stephanie reads for the love of words, and writes fiction about Dark Hearts and
Heroes revolving around social taboos. When ever asked, she'll reply
her whole life can be seen through a comic strip ~ sometimes twisted,
sometimes funny but always beautiful and its title is adventure. Come
play!
Heroes revolving around social taboos. When ever asked, she'll reply
her whole life can be seen through a comic strip ~ sometimes twisted,
sometimes funny but always beautiful and its title is adventure. Come
play!
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