Vampire University (Book One in the Vampire University Series)

 

 

 

 

 

Vampire University

VJ Erickson

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2012

 

The taxi pulled up behind a row of cars and vans backed up so far from the freshmen dorms at VanCamp University that the usually bustling city traffic had come to a complete standstill. Crowds of family members and supporters spilled out into the street and children darted between their legs. Among them their soon-to-be college students milled about, pretending not to be terrified.

“Here is fine,” Taylor said and opened the door.

“Are you sure, miss? If we wait just a minute, we can pull up closer.”

“No thank you,” she said.

The sooner she got out, the sooner she could blend in. Sitting by herself in the backseat of a taxi she thought it was obvious that she arrived alone, but once in the middle of a crowd she would be invisible. No longer the lone girl in a cab, she could be indistinguishable from the girls who had parents, siblings, and friends all waiting for them nearby.

Taylor quickly counted out the fare, while stealing glances to her side to see if anyone was watching. She fidgeted while the driver removed her two suitcases from the trunk. When the driver offered to help carry her things to the door, she quickly refused.

“No thank you. It’s not far. Have a nice day.”

The driver shrugged and hopped back into the car, leaving Taylor standing alone on the curb. She strapped one bag over her shoulder, clutched the other in her hand, and began to walk briskly in the direction of the parade of mom-mobiles and city taxis, trying to blend into the crowds and chaos.

She came to the end of the procession of cars and stopped, pulling out a folded piece of paper and read:

 

Summers Hall # 304

 

Looking up, Taylor saw the name of her dormitory in shiny black letters that stood in contrast to the dirty grey stonework of the seemingly ancient building they labeled. Summers Hall was noticeably less impressive than the New England architecture that covered the brochures for VU. Taylor saw nothing of the sort anywhere on the street on which she stood. Instead of stately columns and aged stone and brick, the building in front of her was constructed from stubborn gray rectangles of indeterminate material. If not for the frenetic family crowds that surrounded the building, it could pass for a prison. Aged metal beams criss-crossed the facade like faded ribbons wrapping a worn package. The building was windowless except for the top two floors, which seemed to be at least ten floors above the third floor where her room assignment would be located.

She didn’t mind that these dorms revealed the university’s trick. They lured students  with the promise of a beautiful campus full of historic urban character and then pulled back the curtain to reveal that they would instead spend their student lives in cinder block silos. This might disappoint other students, but Taylor found it reassuring. The cheery world of distinguished privilege depicted on the brochures was not one Taylor was familiar with. This world in front of her, with its gray windowless walls, was one she knew quite well.

Taylor gathered her possessions and her courage and turned resolutely to face the imposing structure. She marched towards the building with as much confidence as she could fake.

Inside the front lobby, the chaos outside was condensed and amplified and younger siblings that were once running free, ducking in and out of crowds, were now trying to recreate the reckless outdoor scene in a ten-foot waiting area. Scattered amongst the confusion were quiet teenagers, looking around nervously. Seeing her new neighbors looking as alone as she felt despite their crowds of supporters, Taylor’s fears calmed a little. She had imagined that she would be the only one alone and scared, but reading the faces of those around her she imagined that they might have felt as alone and scared as she did.

She stopped in front of a metal sign pointing to the elevators and caught her reflection. Dots of perspiration had formed along her hairline which she carefully dabbed with the end of her sleeve. She tried to imagine that she looked like a college student, that her dark-framed glasses were the height of hipster fashion, and that her plain brown ponytail was cute and not just lazy. She told herself that she was an adult confidently inhabiting her world and not the freckle-faced child she felt like.

Feeling unsure of herself, she pulled the ponytail out, letting her hair fall to her shoulders. With a quick glance in each direction, she discretely tucked her glasses into her purse. Her reflection turned fuzzy, but she convinced herself that these changes had transformed her from ugly duckling teenager into the swan-like adult that always emerged in these scenes in movies. Simply take off the glasses and voila: makeover complete! Now, she tried to tell herself, she looked the part.

She ducked into the elevator ahead of the crowds and pressed herself against the back corner. In filed parents and their children, their features blurring as they entered into her field of far-sighted vision. Taylor stared at her feet.

At the third floor she squeezed through the crowded elevator, apologized to the little girl she practically knocked over, and stepped towards her new home.

She had spoken to her new roommate on the phone. What she knew of her new dorm-mate could be summed up in a handful of words: Hannah Cohen, freshman, undeclared. Hannah seemed friendly and spoke with ease and confidence. This had made Taylor a little nervous on the phone, as Hannah talked so easily to a perfect stranger that Taylor was sure that her new roommate must be well-liked and popular. While she was liked well-enough, Taylor was certainly never popular and she worried about being the uncool roommate by virtue of comparative proximity. There goes Hannah's dorky roommate, everyone would say in pitying whispers.

Taylor squinted to make out the door numbers. Was that 304 or 309? This was silly, she decided. Her Hollywood makeover would have to wait. Her new surroundings were nerve-wracking enough without being able to see them properly. Taylor reconsidered the glasses and quickly retrieved them from her purse and put them on. She inserted her key into the door, but it was unlocked. As soon as the first sliver of light peeked through the crack of the door, she heard Hannah’s voice exclaim excitedly, “Taylor!”

The door swung open from the other side and every fear Taylor had faded away in that moment. A girl at least a foot shorter than her, beaming from ear to ear, skipped towards the door with her hand outstretched.

“I’m Hannah. It’s so great to meet you!” she said, forcing her hand a few inches from Taylor’s side.

Taylor felt herself relax and she returned the handshake.

“I’m Taylor. Pleased to meet you too.”

Given Hannah’s confident demeanor on the phone, Taylor had tried to construct an image of her in her mind using all the popular pretty-girl TV stereotypes she could assemble: tall, skinny, and blonde. Instead, who stood before her was nothing like what she had imagined. Taylor had moved often in her life from small town to small town, but even as much as she traveled, most of her neighbors in the rural Midwest tended to be
Caucasian
. So while it never occurred to her that her roommate would be anything but a white girl, the girl who greeted Taylor had a much darker complexion. Middle-eastern, possibly? Taylor didn’t think it was appropriate to ask.

Hannah was small

at least a foot shorter than Taylor

and she was dressed like no popular teenager Taylor had ever seen before. She wore bright red khaki pants that were high-wasted, pleated in the front, and tucked into a pair of matching red flats. Her crisp white blouse was covered by a sweater vest in the same bright red as her pants. Her hair was short, straight, dark, and meticulously groomed, almost businesslike. If forced into a comparison, Hannah would definitely be the dorky roommate. What a relief, thought Taylor.

Taylor took a moment to look around the room. It too was tiny, but unlike Hannah it was completely devoid of character. Against one cinderblock wall two nondescript mattresses were arranged in a row just barely off the floor. Between them a tiny refrigerator sat on the carpet. On the other side, particle board shelving and drawers covered the entire wall except for two spots with standalone desks. Just as the nondescript gray buildings calmed her fears, the unpretentious accommodations reassured Taylor. They were modest, simple, ordinary- like her.

“Oh here, let me get that for you!” Hannah said while pulling Taylor’s bag from her shoulder, not even pretending to hear her polite protesting. “Is your family coming up?”

“No,” Taylor said softly.

If Hannah noticed any awkwardness, she didn't let on.

“Well then, you probably could use a hand with the rest of your stuff. I’ll come with you!”

“This is it,” Taylor said, her voice even quieter.

Hannah paused for a moment and the smile vanished so briefly that Taylor wondered if she had imagined it.

“Well, you’re all set then! My parents couldn’t come either. They’re stationed overseas, so they just loaded me up on a plane and sent me on my way.”

“Oh…”

Hannah paused again. This time the smile was clearly gone. Taylor could see that Hannah was contemplating Taylor. She seemed to be wondering what Taylor’s story was and wondering if she was allowed ask.

Taylor knew if she didn’t say it now then it would only get harder. She set her bag against a chair and sat on the edge of one of the mattresses, letting out a sigh that was far louder than she intended. Taylor cleared her throat and prepared to tell her story.

"My parents passed away when I was young," she began.

“Oh… I’m.. I’m sorry.” Hannah, stammered.

Any traces of her earlier confidence vanished quickly.

“Oh no, it’s okay,” Taylor reassured her. “I mean… you know, I’m used to it now.”

“Oh, well that’s good! I mean…”

Hannah’s eyes lowered.

“I mean…" she continued, "I don’t mean ‘good’, I’m sorry, it’s just…”

“No really, it’s fine,” Taylor said, attempting a smile.

Taylor had meant to explain further, but even a lifetime later she felt it difficult to talk about and it was not often she was given the opportunity anyway. Everyone assumed that her uncle was her father. They shared the same last name, after all. And a single father, or at least what people assumed was a single father, inspired many gossipy whispers but few direct questions. Besides, she remembered nothing of what happened and didn't really care to. She felt fortunate that she was too young to remember the details of the fire that took her parents' lives. Her brother was old enough to remember, but he refused to talk about it and she learned early in her life to stop asking.

To Taylor’s surprise, Hannah lunged towards her with arms outstretched and dropped down onto the bed beside her, embracing her in a side hug while burying her face against Taylor’s shoulder. Hannah looked back up and the uncertainty on her face had vanished, replaced again with the broadly-grinning confident pixie Taylor had first met.

“Well if there’s anything I can do for you, you just let me know!” said Hannah. “We’re roommates now, so we’ve got to look out for each other!”

Taylor was surprised that Hannah didn’t press for further information, but she supposed that it was obvious that the topic was an uncomfortable one for her and she was grateful to not have to explain herself further.

The rest of the afternoon passed as if the previous conversation never happened. For now, any lingering discomfort was dispelled by her new roommate. It seemed there was no danger of awkward silence whenever Hannah was in the room. Despite having unintentionally revived painful past memories, Hannah did not appear deterred from peppering Taylor with questions, but she carefully avoided any questions of home life that might lead to uncomfortable answers. So instead of parents, high schools, and hometowns, their conversation turned ahead to things like laundry, dining plans, and class schedules.

It was just as Taylor was beginning to really relax that there was a loud knock on the dorm-room door and a female voice shouted through it, “Meet for dinner downstairs in one hour!”

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