Sunnyvale, California
Earth
1998
Tiffany Winters, ordinary girl in an ordinary town, was about to do the ordinary thing for a girl her age -- slack off and read magazines to kill time until her boyfriend showed up -- when her pager buzzed. The pager was the one thing in her room that didn't
quite
fit. It was a room of boy band posters, old Easy bake ovens that she had never had the heart to throw away, a cheap boombox that still had the half rewound cassette tape for
Alanna's First Adventure
by Tamora Pierce crammed into the second tape slot, and three VHS rewinder boxes, which contained, in order, her recorded Simpsons marathon, her recorded X-Files marathon, and her recorded hour of CSPAN for her stupid civics class.
It was, in other words, the room of an ordinary, well to do teen girl.
Teen girls didn't
have
pagers.
Pagers were things parents had -- doctors and lawyers and stuff.
Tiff's pager was hidden, tucked away under a drawer, in a non-descript binder, and with its beeper set so softly that only a highly advanced listening device, the kind used by the FBI to snoop out drug king-pins, might have heard it. And only then by pressing it against the top of the drawer. Tiff heard it, though. Tiff closed her magazine, closed her eyes, rolled her head back and groaned. "Christamungus," she whispered, then remained there, hoping that maybe, just maybe, her pager had bleeped at her by accident.
Maybe, if she ignored it, it would go away.
The pager bleeped again.
"Blargh!" Tiff stood, tossed her magazine onto the bed, then grabbed her drawer. She fished out the binder, popped it open, wriggled it around and got out the pager.
C: A-Dee @ Parker and 5
th
! Rit ETA 11:12 AM. Bring HW, S-, bandages
Tiff scowled. "Oh, no, Tiffany, everything should be relaxed this evening!" She said, cocking her head to the side. "Oh, no, Tiffany, you can hang out with your biffer once he's off works." She looked at the alarm clock by her bed. Riley would be off work at eleven -- one of the downsides of working the late shift at 7/11. Well, the middle late shift, before the late late shift started. Tiff had had a whole plan. She'd lay around, maybe get into something really cute, and then Riley could climb up the window like...like...
Tiff shook her head, her cheeks burning as she realized she hadn't been imagining Riley at all.
She put her hands over her face. "It's okay. Mr. X doesn't do it on purpose. H-"
"Hey," a soft voice spoke from behind her.
Tiffany Winters responded in a way very unlike an ordinary girl. Her body blurred into motion, snapping out her leg and kicking it into the air at exactly the height of a human throat, pinning the figure that had seemingly materialized in her room out of thin air. Tiff spent a few seconds blinking at the face above her foot, even as her hand had jerked one of her concealed stakes out from under the half-dozen hiding places she had stashed the things. The stake fell from her nerveless fingers, clattering to the ground.
"Vicky!?" Tiff whispered.
"Hey Tiff," Victor Enache said, his voice squeaking slightly around the pressure of Tiff's heel. She jerked her leg back, staggering.
"Vicky, what are you
doing
here?" Tiff asked, her eyes wide. "And how did you get in?"
"You invited me," Victor said, rubbing his throat and wincing. "Still hurts when you do that. I was worried you'd lost your touch." His voice had a sardonic edge to it, even as his deep, brown-black eyes looked into hers. They were filled with that same soul-deep hurt that Tiff remembered seeing. She bristled. How
dare
he. How absolute
dare
he just...show up again in his rumpled coat and his tattered jeans, all broad shouldered and muscular and pale and brooding with his stupid mop of silky black hair and that ever so
slight
Romanian accent -- not thick and goofy, but sexy and exotic, and with those tiny little fangs of his, peeking over his lips, just begging for her to kiss them.
What an absolute
bastard
.
"I repeatify my query," Tiff said, scowling harder to try and banish the urge to lick his abs. "Where. I mean. Why. The...what are you doing here?" She put her hands on her hips, glaring. Glaring as hard as she could.
The glare bounced off Victor like bullets might have. "I came to warn you," he said. "Someone's trying to kill you."
"Someone? Try to kill me? What a freaking shockalot!" Tiff snapped. She almost immediately regretted saying it. But Victor's face was already hardening into his most deep frown. The kind of frown where he knew she was being childish, and wanted to scold her, but wouldn't because he respected her so much. Which just made Tiff want to lick his abdominal muscles more. Which made Tiff feel angrier about him showing up.
Because they couldn't. They never could again.
"Yes, people in
specific
are trying to kill you. The Camerilla-"
"Oh those bozeones," Tiff muttered. "You know, has anyone told them it's the 20
th
century? Queen went outta style, like, ten years ago." She grinned. "See, it's...it's a joke, cause that old band."
"I saw them live," Victor said, frowning. "And no, the Camerilla is not to be trifled with. They may have called a truce with you ever since the...incident." He looked aside and Tiff bit down on her tongue. The first reaction she had, the one driven by anger and frustration and no tiny amount of lingering hurt, was:
Oh, the time you turned my friends into dog monsters? Yeah, that was sooooome
incident
Victor's lips pursed, as if she had said it out loud anyway. Tiff's eyebrow twitched and she scowled. "So?"
"But just because the local Prince won't come after you, if you maintain your current focus on killing his enemies," Victor said, frowning. "Doesn't mean he won't turn a blind eye if those said enemies decide to
remove
Tiffany Winters, Vampire Hunter from the equation entirely."
"Oh noooo!" Tiff said, her hands going to her cheeks in slow, mock shock.
"It's serious, Tiffany," Victor stepped closer.