Hi all! Here is the next part of my Arachne tale!
Make sure you check my bio for release dates! Please remember that it takes a few days for them to upload after I hit submit, but you should see the rest of this story by Halloween 2019 (Seven chapters total). However, if you are reading this in the future, you should have access to all seven of them now!
I've really appreciated the comments and advice some of you have sent me, especially regarding the late 60s/early 70s, so keep them coming! Don't forget to rate or review, this was definitely a side project for me and an attempt to stretch and refine my writing skills. I am always aiming to improve, and that means trying new things, so I have absolutely adored the kind words from my readers. Don't forget to leave a comment if you enjoyed this story!
Enough from me, you have a tale to get back to!
The Things in the Dark
Ana sat at the Help Desk, going through the large bin of returns. There had been a nasty cold front with rain lately, which meant business had picked up. She stamped the return date into a copy of
A Wrinkle in Time
and set it aside. Louise walked by with a stack of books in her arms and a new notice for the bulletin board. Ana watched her pass, then sank back in her chair with a sigh.
It had been two weeks since she had gone out on a proper hunt. Two weeks of misery, forced to hide in her church at night and hopefully catch some passing birds. She had been forced to up her calorie intake in regards to human food, but now felt a bit off as a result.
Eating nearly every day at Matty's aside, her change in diet was causing her legs to cramp inside of the confines of the wheelchair. It wasn't the kind of cramp her human muscles felt. Rather, it was the dull ache of having a fist clenched for too long. Last night it had taken her several minutes just to get out of her wheelchair, her legs locked into place. She couldn't even massage her legs but had instead relied on a super hot bath to try to relax them.
Darren walked past the desk, a massive toolbox in his left hand. The muscles in his arm bulged through the tight fabric of his shirt and she nearly let out a sigh. Her sudden shift in diet had dramatically decreased her sexual cravings, which was an unexpected upswing. Her body was going into survival mode, meaning that even if she bred, she likely couldn't conceive.
Mixed blessings, she thought to herself. She hadn't seen the men who hunted her, but she knew it was just a matter of time before they came snooping around again. Well, maybe. It was her hope that they would assume she had died in the blast. It was all the town had talked about the next day, and several rumors had bounced around in Matty's and at the library. Her favorite theory involved the aliens that had crashed at Roswell crashing their saucer into the lake, but the most common involved some idiots with stolen dynamite.
Close enough.
She sipped at her water and let out a sigh. Louise had gone on a diet at least a couple of times since Ana started working for the library. The woman had become an irritable mess for weeks and had grumbled about the wonderful smells that saturated the air around Mattie's every morning. It was like that for Ana now, except it was a the patrons who came in to browse that smelled so delicious, a cruel reminder that she was never more than a couple steps ahead of her own instincts. She already felt that creeping edge of irritability, followed by a strong desire to suck someone dry.
No, she would abduct a pet or something long before hunting down a human. Or even leave town altogether. Now she wondered if she could fake a vacation and move on to safer hunting grounds for a week.
The minutes crawled by, impossibly slow. Her stomach growled, and she fought the urge to lay her head down on the desk. Storytime was coming up in half an hour, and she would be forced to read books to the equivalent of an open box of doughnuts.
Louise screamed out in the lobby and came in the doors, her arms now empty.
"Darren!" She called for him several times before he appeared, his toolbox left behind.
"Are you okay?" he asked.
"We have mice!" The head librarian shook her head violently, a strand of hair popping free of her bun. "I saw a couple of them out in the front lobby. They ran into the storage room!"
"I'll go get some traps." He left, walking out the front door.
Louise sat down next to Ana, placing a hand dramatically on her own chest.
"At least it wasn't a spider," Ana said.
"Close enough. I don't need mice in here chewing up the pages and shitting everywhere." She took Ana's water and drank half of it in one go. She picked up a book and fanned herself with the pages open.
"Please watch the desk, I need to go use the bathroom." Ana moved her chair backward and around the large desk, leaving Louise behind. Once in the lobby, she moved as quickly as she could, wheeling her chair into the large storage room. Darren was looking through the boxes, trying to find the traps.
"Do we only have these kind?" he asked, holding up a large rat trap.
Ana swallowed the lump in her throat. "Yeah." She didn't think he'd find them so fast.
"Hmm." He tossed the trap to the side. "I think I can build something that won't kill them. Not their fault they wandered into the wrong building."
"What will you do with them after you catch them?"
He shrugged. "Release them out in the woods? Let nature deal with them."
Oh, I wish you would. She could smell them now, hiding somewhere in the room, two little cupcakes with tails. "How are you going to catch them?"
"Hmm." He looked around the room. "I could probably bait them with some food. Maybe a box with a hole in the top?"
"They'll just chew through it."
"Shit, you're right."
"I know." She rolled over to an old waste bin and held it up. "If you dump this out, it should be smooth enough on the inside that they can't get out."