Evilution Read online




  Evilution

  Lisa Moore

  AuthorHouse™

  1663 Liberty Drive

  Bloomington, IN 47403

  www.authorhouse.com

  Phone: 1-800-839-8640

  © 2011 by Lisa Moore. All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.

  First published by AuthorHouse 12/27/2011

  ISBN: 978-1-4685-0881-9 (sc)

  ISBN: 978-1-4685-0880-2 (ebk)

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2011961762

  Printed in the United States of America

  Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.

  Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.

  Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Hills College

  Chapter 2

  My Beginning

  Chapter 3

  The “Library”

  Chapter 4

  In the Maple Tree

  Chapter 5

  Catch a Bear, Save a Life

  Chapter 6

  Intro to Vampires 101

  Chapter 7

  An Interesting Breakfast

  Chapter 8

  Evidence of “Evilution”

  Chapter 9

  An “Error” in the Genetic Code

  Chapter 10

  An Unusual Blood Run

  Chapter 11

  A Chance Encounter

  Chapter 12

  A Much Anticipated Day Unfolds

  Chapter 13

  A Date with Lily

  Chapter 14

  A Dream Realized

  Chapter 15

  I Learn About Lily

  Chapter 16

  We Take a Little Trip

  Chapter 17

  A Surprise for Lily

  Chapter 18

  Sunrise Over Raquette Lake

  Chapter 19

  My Past Catches Up to My Present

  Chapter 20

  A Moment of Bliss

  Chapter 21

  Being a Vampire is “Totally Awesome”

  Chapter 22

  Passing of the Evening Star

  Chapter 23

  Loose Ends Tied Up

  and

  Some New Truths Reveled

  Chapter 24

  A Glimpse Into My Past

  Chapter 25

  Final Exam Day

  Chapter 26

  A Strange Gift and an Impulsive Purchase

  Chapter 27

  Our Connection Grows Stronger

  Chapter 28

  A Meeting of the Minds

  Chapter 29

  One Truth Uncovered

  Chapter 30

  The Adventure Begins

  Chapter 31

  My Truth Revealed

  Chapter 32

  A World Upside Down

  Chapter 33

  Acceptance at Last

  Chapter 34

  A Nobel Act and a Parting Gift

  To Curtis

  For your love and support

  Max

  My biggest fan

  Mia

  My fellow lover of books

  Author: Charles Robert Darwin

  Believing as I do that man in the distant future will be a far more perfect creature than he now is, it is an intolerable thought that he and all other sentient beings are doomed to complete annihilation after such long-continued slow progress

  From Life and Letters.

  Special thanks to

  Ruth Harriet Jacobs

  A mentor and friend

  Colette Aufranc

  Editor extraordinaire

  My family and friends

  For your enthusiastic support

  Chapter 1

  Hills College

  She was beautiful to observe. Seeing her muscles flex and her sinews draw tight as her powerful legs propelled her forward in a frantic race for her life was exhilarating. As I chase her through the woods I marvel at her speed and agility even if her attempts are futile. She cannot elude me. I am toying with her, enjoying the chase. I can smell the scent of fear in her wake and hear her pulse growing more rapid as her eyes grow wide with terror. She senses I am pursuing her, a malevolent presence, unaware of what I am but knowing I mean her harm. She is right, for when I catch her I will rip her throat open and drain every drop of her precious blood.

  I am in a heightened state of arousal, consumed in the moment. She is an easy target, out running in the woods alone. I have toyed with her long enough and now her efforts at eluding me are taking their toll. She is breathing heavily and panic has transfixed her gaze as she tries to find a hiding spot within the trees. She is spent, can run no further and resorts to trying to hide within the camouflage of the woods. What she does not understand is that I do not need to see her to find her. I smell her and hear the blood pounding through her veins. I spring on her as she tries to hide among small brush. I attack with blinding speed and sink my teeth into her smooth neck. The torrent of blood threatens to shoot out the sides of my mouth as it explodes from her carotid artery, but I drink greedily and cleanly. I have had plenty of practice executing a kill like this. She is not the first to be sacrificed and she will not be the last.

  Her body thrashes as she tries to break free but the attempt is weak. Shock sets in and she becomes compliant until at last she is dead and the final drops of her blood drain down my throat. My cells tingle with the influx of this crimson nectar. I feel a rush of energy as the blood of my prey courses through me. The intensity of power felt after a feed is in direct correlation to the type of blood consumed. The higher order the prey, the greater the rush. I am charged up from this latest kill and eager to feed more but the sun will be up in an hour. While these woods are off the beaten path and it is still very early, the sun’s light just beginning to brighten the eastern sky, it is risky. There is always the off chance of an early riser or late night partier cutting through the woods going to or from campus nearby. It is time to go, I could easily deal with an intruder catching me on one of my nocturnal adventures, but I prefer to avoid complications.

  My customary way of disposing of a kill like this is to dismember the remains and scatter them in the woods. Nature then becomes my ally as all manor of scavenger will feed on what is left of her, leaving little evidence behind. I rip apart her lifeless body with ease, snapping bone and tearing muscle and flesh. The bloodless tissue is still warm as I toss pieces of her throughout the woods far away from the kill site. I cross a small stream and rinse the fat and hair fragments from my hands.

  As I finish cleaning myself by the stream I catch a familiar scent that peaks my attention. After a kill I have a harder time suppressing my desires to indulge in killing and feeding more. I get caught up in the frenzy of the hunt and the exhilaration of the blood, the feeling is so powerful it is hard not to want more. I smell potential prey heading towards me. I climb up into a large oak and become invisible in the thick
foliage. A herd of deer are making their way through the woods just off a game path. They nervously forage in the underbrush periodically scenting the air, alert for danger. As I watch them move, in near silence below my perch in the oak, I find myself wondering if my last kill was a member of this herd. The beautiful doe I just fed from had a distinctly red shaded pelt and several young deer in this group have very similar coloring.

  Caught up in contemplations of my latest prey’s lineage, wondering if the young red doe below me would taste as sweet as her mother did, I was suddenly assaulted by another scent, a human female was approaching. This scent elicited a much more powerful reaction in me than the deer had. It was a fascinating mix of earthiness, mingled with soap and deodorant, but something else about her chemical fragrance made my already aroused state reach a new peak.

  I could almost taste her, so potent was her pheromone laced aroma. Oh but to really taste her, how long has it been since I have drank straight from the source? This human’s scent is intoxicating; it makes me hunger in a different way. Abandoning my original prey, I silently circle back around the deer herd and take position behind the base of a big white pine. From this vantage point I watch her approach. I watch her pulse throb in the graceful curve of her tanned neck and the beat of her heart sounds like a timpani in my head. I focused in on her every step, every breath, as she passed but a few feet away from my hiding spot and walked up the path through the woods toward the back of the campus that abutted this forest. I recognized this human; it was Professor Bean my new teacher getting an early start on the day.

  I stayed hidden behind the trunk of the tree and silently climbed it once she was passed. From my higher vantage point I watched as she came upon the herd of deer ahead of her. At first she did not even see them, their camouflage hiding them in the woods. Suddenly she was near them, as they foraged just up ahead on the path. Miraculously they did not hear her approach as she stopped dead in her tracks and stared in awe at the 20 plus white tailed deer 15 feet in front of her, they simply continued to forage.

  What the professor did next gave me an insight to her personality and brought a smile to my lips. She sat down right where she stood, in the middle of the path, and watched them. Twenty minutes passed when the breeze suddenly shifted, the tails of the deer stood up revealing how they got their name. The “alarm bell” having been sounded, the deer bounded out of sight in the blink of an eye.

  Professor Bean seemed disappointed at the deer’s rapid retreat, but when she looked at her watch and noticed she was late to class, she mumbled under her breath and raced up the path to campus. What Professor Bean didn’t know was that she was not alone in the woods that early morning. I had followed that same deer herd and it was not her scent that drove them away but mine. What she also didn’t know was that had she seen the smile on my lips at that moment, she would have been the one to run. However she could not have gotten away if I wanted to stop her. And finally, she didn’t know I had heard her mutterings as she took off late to class. I was 100 yards away and perched high in the branches of an old white pine. She had a distinct New York accent, and I easily heard her mumbled “Crap! Their gonna leave!” as she ran off to campus, referring to students in her Evolutionary Biology class.

  I knew the rule, students had to wait 30 minutes into a class before they could leave if a professor was late; she was cutting it close. I followed my new quarry. Out from the wooded path she burst into a group of undergrads as they made their way toward where she now fled. She apologized rapidly, never breaking stride. “Run Bean, run!” shouted one from the group, ala Robin Wright Penn’s character from the movie Forest Gump. I watched her chuckle as she ran into the science annex where she apparently had her class. Leaping stealthily across the tree tops, staying in the deeply shadowed boughs, I followed the tree line behind the science annex. I could hear her strong voice coming from an open window on the second floor. Silent and well out of sight in the foliage, I sat atop my new perch in a majestic oak. My birds’ eye view and exceptional hearing allowed me to eavesdrop on the class.

  She arrived to class 29 minutes late just as her students were packing up to leave. She delivered an impromptu lecture on the evolution of the white tailed deer, focusing in on the evolution of their camouflage and their skills and adaptations for avoiding predation. I was captivated by her lesson, impressed with how she taught in the moment. Everything she taught was tied into the day’s reality. She could bring her experience with the deer into the classroom and it was as if each student had been there with her. The rapport she had with her students was easy and confident. She exhibited a passion for biology without her seeming preachy or clichéd and brought alive, topics that would otherwise be buried in vocabulary and memorization. It was what I was so pleasantly surprised to find out about her when I started taking her class this week and one of the reasons why I will be tracking her every move for a while. Something about this woman intrigues me. How strange.

  Winter comes early to upstate New York. Hills College is a moderately sized private college, located in bucolic Hills, New York. It is the third week of the fall semester and on a day like today, the campus looks beautiful. The surrounding hills and mountains are a riot of color and the early morning chill has the distinct smell of autumn with hints of winter to come. The peaceful campus is slow to wake.

  Ever since the encounter in the woods two weeks ago I have been tracking Professor Bean’s every move. I have found that she rarely drives anywhere and often walks through the woods as a short cut to campus. It has become my habit to follow her as she takes her morning walk from her residence to her office. It seems that each days trek is often a mini nature excursion. Today she almost walked right into a skunk as she made her way to the wooded path, the short cut she takes to school. Thankfully Mr. Mephitis mephitis was as afraid as she was and ambled off into the trees in the opposite direction of campus.

  I broke off from following the professor to her office and went around the back of the science building to class. I entered the lecture hall, it was packed, every seat of the 150 seat, theater style room, filled with sleepy freshman and scattered upper classmen. Coffee cups, snack wrappers and the occasional piece of fruit lay strewn about like the freshly fallen leaves on campus. Just before 8:00, Professor Bean swept into the lecture hall; she brought the scent of crisp leaves, dirt and the faintest hint of skunk. I say swept in because when she moved the professor did so with an athlete or a dancer’s grace, confident and sure.

  The lingering scent of skunk tickled my nose. I rather liked the smell of skunk, the very earthy nature of it. I took a deep breath trying to inhale its natural aroma. It calmed me. It seemed I was a bit anxious for class to start, or more specifically to see Professor Bean again. My choice to enroll at this college this semester is proving more interesting than I had anticipated and not for the academic stimulation but for stimulation of a different sort, one that has eluded me for some time now.

  As she unpacked her chocolate brown, aged leather backpack, she addressed the class. “Good morning! I am pleased to see that after three weeks I still have your interest.” It was no small feat to have an 8:00am lecture hall filled by mostly freshmen. Every semester she expected attendance to drop but most semesters she had a packed house three days a week for her introductory science class titled Bio 108—Mysteries, Myths and Monsters. On the first day, the professor said it was her favorite class because it allowed for such freedom to explore new topics. She also mentioned that she taught Anatomy and Physiology and an Adaptations and Evolution class, the latter of which I surreptitiously observed. Her enthusiasm as she introduced the class as an exploration of myth, mysteries and monsters, their possible realities and the supporting scientific evidence, instantly hooked her student’s interest.

  The first week of class was spent relating some marine myths. Professor Bean talked about mermaids and sea serpents, their deep history in human’s stories and the possible expl
anations for these myths, like the manatee for the mermaid and the giant squid for the sea serpent. She regaled the class with stories of her graduate work aboard the research vessel the SS Duke, which she nicknamed the SS Puke due to the fact that three out of the five grad students aboard were seasick for the first four weeks of the eight week trip. She showed slides of her research, many filled with beautiful and rare photos of elusive sea life.

  By the end of the first week, I left class feeling like I had been aboard that ship and swam in that blue green water with the manta ray. It also made me think of some new and interesting hunting opportunities in my future, possibly spring break. It was Professor Bean’s ability to weave details into her stories, like color, texture and smell that captivated her students, specifically me. She seemed to have extra sensory perception and an uncanny way of explaining her experience so that you felt it too.

  Continuing on the theme of mysteries of the deep, week two was focused on the Loch Ness monster and the history behind maritime sayings like “red sun at night sailors delight, red sun in the morning sailor take warning”. All in all, the first two weeks were enjoyable. I found the class and the teacher to be more informative and colorful than I could have hoped for. It is difficult to find new perspective in some ways when you have lived as full a life as I have. I sometimes feel like I have seen it all before. But this woman, this mortal young woman with her thirty something years of experience, somehow has been able to captivate me. She has shown me the world through a different set of eyes, and hers, by the way, are the most intriguing shade of brown with green speckles and hints of gold flecks. Of course to the normal eye, I imagine they just look brown, since most mortals lack the keen eyesight that a creature such as I possess.

  This week we have discussed the myth of Big Foot and the Yeti. As I sat reminiscing about the last two weeks, I wasn’t even paying attention and had failed to realize that the professor had started her lecture. I was only drawn out of my reverie when she withdrew a very large plaster cast of what appeared to be a foot print left by a Yeti. She explained how in her last semester of grad school, she went on an expedition to the Himalayas with her mentor and two other Grad students. She was just finishing up another story involving her “brilliant, eccentric, hippie, mentor”, Dr. Vincent Derezinski. One of many we have heard now. He really seems like quite a character from the way she talks about him, yet she always maintains an overlying sense of admiration and affection for him when retelling adventures they have shared.