Some Enchanted Evening

More Star and Hero. In which Danny is basically me when it comes to dancing, except I never got up the nerve to learn to lead when I took dance classes with the 50+es.

Anyway, onto the story.


It wasn’t the sort of place I expected to find myself face to face with Detective Danny H. Marsh. She looked equally surprised to see me. No doubt I hadn’t struck her as the type of woman who frequented marginally shady night clubs. She also seemed surprised to see that I was not alone.

Gabi, the daughter of Rush–one of our most trusted human caretakers–had wanted to go out; Rush and her mother, Rosario, had wanted to say no, but I’d volunteered to accompany her. There was no arguing about that from any of them. They knew Gabi would be safe with me, and Gabi knew I would still let her manage to have some actual fun. Minus alcohol, because while I had no qualms with taking a twenty-year-old to a club, I was not going to let her get intoxicated. Not there, anyway.

And now we’d run into the intriguing Detective Marsh, who was leaning against the wall near the dance floor, nursing a half-consumed bottle of water. It was intriguing to see a slightly dressed-down version of her. She wore dark jeans, those same sensible boots, and a light blue striped shirt with the sleeves rolled up. Her eyes went from me to Gabi–who at six feet rivalled Rush for height–and back to me.

“Detective!” I said with a smile, leaning in closer to make myself heard above the music. “I can’t say I expected to meet you here.”

Danny shifted her weight from one foot to the other, squeezing the water bottle slightly as she did so. “Have’ta say I’m surprised to see you, too.” She paused for a moment, eyes flicking up to Gabi again. “And please, just Danny’s fine, as much as we keep…bumping into each other.”

I offered her a smile. I could almost feel Gabi smirking above us. No doubt she had picked up on my interest in the detective; it was a hazard of her having been raised around vampires–she could read most of us like books, and never let us forget that fact. “So this is Danny,” she said. A flicker of surprise registered on Danny’s face a second before Gabi reached out to shake her hand. “I’m Gabi. And no, I’m not her girlfriend. She’s like…an older sister or a youngish aunt.”

Danny looked like she wasn’t sure whether to feel relieved or, as the saying goes, “busted.”

“Um, thanks. For that,” she said, extracting her hand from Gabi’s. “I wasn’t going to ask, but…” She trailed off, glancing back at me. “So what brings you here?”

“This one,” I said, nudging Gabi, “wanted a night out, and I’m tagging along so she’s not on her own.” Danny seemed relieved to hear the explanation.

“I’m kind of doing the same,” she said. She held up and shook the bottle of water. “I’m tonight’s designated driver.”

I grinned at her and leaned in a little closer. “Does that also keep you from the dance floor?”

Danny shrugged, looking slightly uncomfortable. “I’m not really good at dancing to most of what they’re playing tonight.”

“Would you dance with me if I convinced the DJ to play something…more your speed?” The look on Danny’s face was definitely worth it–managing to ruffle the detective seemed to result in her making adorable, if slightly confused, faces. “You can manage a slow dance, yes?”

“It’s been a while, but yeah, I can manage a slow dance without making a fool out of myself.” Still she looked half afraid that she might do exactly that.

I tugged Gabi down and whispered the song I had in mind in her ear. She looked from Danny to be and gave out a decidedly unladylike laugh–another thing besides her height that marked her as Rush’s daughter. Danny looked a little like a deer caught in the headlights; I rolled my eyes and swatted Gabi’s arm. “Go. Bribe the DJ if you have to, but get him to play that song next.”

Gabi left us, laughing again as she went. Danny downed the rest of her water and threw the bottle away. She ran a hand through her hair and looked at me. “Should I be worried?”

“Not in this case,” I said, smiling. I took her hand and led her toward the dance floor, just onto the edge at first, until the current song ended. The music swelled, and I rested a hand on Danny’s shoulder. Her right hand immediately came to rest, gently but firmly, just below my shoulder blade. A sign of a decent lead, which made me wonder if she didn’t have at least a little ballroom training. I would have to look into that more later.

She raised her eyebrows slightly at my song selection, but eased into the rhythm of the music almost effortlessly. She had said it had been a while since she had danced. Admittedly, it had been some time since I had danced like this as well. We glided effortlessly along in our little corner of the dance floor. Thankfully no one bumped into us. If they had, I would have been sorely tempted to throttle them for interrupting a rather delightful moment.

When the song came to an end, Danny didn’t let go of my hand. She took a deep breath, glanced away for a moment, then looked back at me.

“So…was that…” She took another breath. “Sorry, I’m not good at this. Was there some kind of flirtation involved in that song choice? Because the lyrics are–”

I cut her off by laying a finger against her lips. “If you’re asking if that was my way of asking you on a date, Danny H. Marsh, then you would be correct.”

Danny grinned slowly, and looked like she was half tempted to duck her head or look away for a moment. “Okay. Good. I was hoping that it meant something.” She gave my hand a squeeze, and we began walking off the dance floor. “I’m not always good at telling when something like that means something and when it doesn’t.”

I cupped her cheek gently with my free hand, and for a moment I was afraid I’d somehow short circuited her. She relaxed after a moment, however, and I smiled. “In that case, I’ll be sure to make my feelings obvious.”

Fic: Of All the Gin Joints

More Star and Hero. This time from Danny’s POV. This one takes place a little while after their first meeting.


It wasn’t exactly the sort of place I expected to run into Estella Hathorne.

It wasn’t a dive bar by a long shot, but it wasn’t classy, either. She struck me as the classy type. Cocktails in a swanky, upscale NYC VIP-type establishment kind of classy. Not…moderately priced place you went to after a decently good paycheck wanting to feel a little fancy. Not that that’s why I was there, but that’s just the kind of place it was.

I didn’t really expect to spot her nodding in the disinterested-but-polite, long-suffering way she was nodding at the man next to her at the bar. She leaned away; he leaned in. She looked like she found him about as interesting as watching paint dry in a room with no lights.

So I did what I usually do in a situation like that.

“Hey, Stella!” I said, grinning and waving at her as I made my way up to her. “Sorry I’m so late–my cell reception crapped out and parking was hell.”

She gave me a surprised–if slightly relieved–smile in return, and played along. “Danny, darling, I was starting to think you’d never make it.”

“Hey, we were talking here.” I turned to face the annoyed young man at Ms. Hathorne’s side. I rested a hand on her shoulder reassuringly.

“Oh? Sorry, couldn’t tell,” I replied. He scowled, dark brows knitting slightly. “Looked like she was about to excuse herself, to me.”

“I was, actually,” Ms. Hathorne said. “I’m afraid you’re really not my type.”

“C’mon! We really had something!” And he really looked like he believed it, too. Great. Might be a more interesting evening than I wanted.

I held up a hand. “If she says your not her type, your not her type. That’s all.”

He jabbed a finger in my face. “Fuck off!”

“Easy, pal. I’m not trying to start anything. Just making sure you get that the lady’s saying ‘no’.”

I didn’t really expect for him to go from swearing and finger-jabbing to swinging punches quite as fast as he did. Guess I underestimated how many drinks he’d had.

Not that I did a lot of thinking in the moment his left fist connected with my face. I’m not too proud to admit that I stumbled. I tasted blood, but I wasn’t sure where in my mouth it was coming from.

“You shouldn’ta done that,” I slurred. He swung again, but I managed to dodge this time; I got his arm and twisted it behind his back, pinning him against the bar. “Ya just assaulted a detective, buddy.”

“What, I can’t even leave you alone to go smoke without having t’ get your ass out of trouble when I get back?”

I turned my head at the familiar voice of one of the uniformed officers from my precinct. “This yours, O’Malley?”

“Yeah, yeah. Still housebreaking him.” O’Malley was a veteran officer, a good cop. They always seemed to stick the wildest rookies with him. He leaned over to get a closer look at my face. “Shit, Marsh, he got ya pretty good. Geeze, what was it this time? You still playin’ knight-in-shining-armor?”

“So she has a habit of this?” Ms. Hathorne’s amusement was evident in her voice. I felt my ears burn a little, and O’Malley laughed.

“Yeah, that’s Marsh for ya. She’s a good kid.” He leaned in and grabbed his rookie by the collar; I let go and stepped back, taking the towel the bartender offered.

I pressed it to my face, pausing to glance at Ms. Hathorne. She was sort of staring at me. Very intensely, almost like she was trying to look through me or into me. She’d looked at me almost that same when I’d given her my card. It was a little strange, but it wasn’t bad. Not exactly, anyway. Just…strange.

“So. Troy, this is Detective Marsh. Detective Marsh, this is Troy. Troy is a little punk who needs to learn to go easy on the booze. And leave women alone, apparently.” Troy looked a little terrified and a little like he might throw up.

“Don’t do it again,” I muttered, removing the bloodied towel. “And don’t take swings at people you just met. They might not be as forgiving as I’m gonna be tonight.” He nodded, and O’Malley steered him away after leaving the bartender a generous tip for having to put up with us.

Ms. Hathorne touched my injured face gently. I jerked slightly, but she didn’t move away. Her hand was cool, and that was a little soothing. Her eyes caught mine. She had beautiful eyes. Gray. The kind of foggy gray that happens on a rainy day when you can’t tell the sky from the wet road.

“Will you be all right?” she asked softly, hand still against my skin.

I tried to smile with the uninjured side of my face. “I’ve had worse.”

She chuckled. “Somehow I believe you have.”

The bartender told me to keep the towel, and I walked Ms. Hathorne to her car. I dragged myself home and cradled my face in the welcome embrace of a bag of frozen peas.

It didn’t hit me till the next morning that I no longer had that towel.

Fic: Death, Therefore, Is Nothing to Us

More Star and Hero. This time, it’s their first meeting.


It would have been easy enough to slip away, but Jack had always been such a good host. It would have been rude to leave when the rest of the guests had to be interviewed by–or at least give their details to–the detectives when they arrived.

And, after all, poor Jack had staggered into the room and died almost in front of me.

The police arrived, the crime scene people arrived, and then the detectives arrived. Two women, close in height, though that was likely due to one wearing heels. Detective Heels wore a cream colored pants suit and a white top. Her blonde hair was pulled into a bun, and she wore black-framed glassed. All business, from the look of her. She began talking to the uniformed officers while the other detective had a look at Jack’s body.

The detective examining Jack wore boots–sensible but stylish–black slacks, white Oxford shirt, striped gray vest, and a black blazer. Her hair was very short and, with the way the light in the room hit it, I wasn’t immediately sure of the color, thought it was darker than the other detectives.

Eventually, the detective began collecting statements and information. The short-haired one started with me.

“Detective Danny H. Marsh. And that’s my partner, Detective Huff,” she added, gesturing over her shoulder at Detective Heels. “How well did you know Jack Terrance, Ms…”

“Estella Hathorne. I’ve known Jack for several years. He did some investing for me a few years ago, and we’ve kept in touch.” It was a little more than a few years, but Detective Marsh was unlikely to discover that detail in her investigation of Jack’s murder.

Our conversation continued in the usual way such conversations do. Did I know of anyone who would want to harm Jack? Did I know if he had any enemies? How had he been acting this tonight? How had the other guests been acting? I answered as truthfully as I could, but the detective herself was far more interesting than the conversation. Her eyes were a rich, golden brown. Her hair was a similar color, though lighter and slightly reddish when the light hit it a certain way. She was beautiful.

In a moment of curiosity–and perhaps weakness or playfulness–I attempted to charm her. Vampires have a…magnetic ability to attract nearly any human. But Detective Marsh seemed to take no notice of this.

She wrapped up her note-taking and held out a business card to me. She said, “If you think of anything else, give me a call.”

I took the card from her, purposefully letting my fingers linger slightly as they brush against hers. Detective Marsh tilted her head ever so slightly and glanced briefly–so quickly most people might have missed it–at my hand.

I smiled at her and nodded. “I certainly will.”

Fic: To Everything There Is a Season

I wrote this partly because of a dream. I intend to write more of these characters/this universe; they’ll be tagged OTP: Star and Hero. Since this is a story coming at a point where Estella (the “Star” in the OTP) and Detective Danny H. Marsh (the “H” is for “Hero” and thus the other part of the OTP name) have been a couple for a while, here is a short cheat sheet of details:

+ Estella is a vampire; she lives with several of her vampire family members and the family’s Matriarch in a large Victorian-ish house out in close to the middle of nowhere in some town/small city in a state i haven’t yet decided upon
+ Danny is a police detective who somehow found herself as one of the family’s human helper monkeys (this is because of Estella, somehow, because she met Estella first, then got pulled into helping out before she knew the fam was vamps)
+ Estella is bisexual
+ Danny is an ace lesbian
+ The Matriarch looks like Holland Taylor
+ Rush is human and is a very fit-and-active-and-could-kick-your-ass-in-a-bar-fight 60-something who’s been working for the family for around 40 years
+ There are other human helpers, they just didn’t show up here (partly because they weren’t in my dream much)


The sun was setting when I heard gunfire. Close. Three shots, three distinct weapons from the sound of it, and the middle one was louder, deeper sounding. There was silence for a moment after that. Then I heard the front door flung open, followed by heavy footsteps and the sound of something being dragged. The smell of blood hit me immediately.

“Essie?!” Rush’s normally calm, gravely voice called out in a frantic-sounding stage-whisper. He knew the rest of the family would still be asleep at this time of day. I had always been an early riser, and my death and rebirth as a vampire had not stopped that.

I came downstairs through the kitchen passageway to avoid whatever sunlight might come through the open front door. Rush’s back was to me as he dragged a bleeding body into the shade of the sitting area. He must have heard my steps, because his turned to face me. Concern and something close to panic showed clearly on his lined, weathered face.

“It’s Marsh,” he said. “She’s hit bad, Essie…”

I dropped to my knees beside the body as Rush gently released his grip on the back collar of Detective Danny H. Marsh’s blazer. She was always so particular about her name, always including the “H.” She’d told me it stood for Hero. I still didn’t know if she was joking or if it really did stand for Hero. I’d never had Rush or anyone else look into her background. Neither I nor the family had ever had any need to doubt her.

And now Danny was bleeding out in front of me, her white shirt a shredded mass of red.

My eyes flashed at Rush. “What happened?

“That hunter McClellan came ‘round again. Got the drop on her. Shotgun.” Rush’s face was a thundercloud. “She got one shot off at him, but he was rushin’ and she missed. I got him in the head, though. He won’t be a problem now.” Not once Rush disposed of the body, anyway.

Danny drew a labored breath. I eased her head and shoulders onto my lap as gently as I could, and she raised an unsteady, bloodied hand to my cheek. I felt the sting of tears in my eyes as she tried to smile at me.

“Stella–”

“Shh, don’t try to talk.” I took her bloody hand in one of mine and stroked her cheek with the other. “I’m here.”

She reached for me again with her other hand, breath hitching and wheezing, and brushed bloody fingertips against my lips. Hooking a finger to pull aside my lower lip, she brushed a fingertip against my undescended canine.

“…please…” There were tears in Danny’s eyes. Her pulse was weakening, and I knew what she was asking me to do. We’d discussed the topic once, briefly, but we hadn’t made a decision. Not really. I didn’t think fate would force our hands this soon.

I stroked her cheek. “Are you sure? You know what will happen.”

Please.” She was more forceful this time, so close to begging. And I couldn’t tell her no. From the moment I began to care about her, I knew I’d never be able to refuse her if she asked for this.

I brought her wrist to my lips and kissed it, then sank my fangs into the faint pulse beneath my lips. She didn’t cry out, though she did make a strained, wet, wheezing sound that pained my heart to hear. When she was nearly gone, I bit my own wrist and held it to her mouth. At first she barely had the strength to lap at the blood. Then, gradually, she strengthened, though it still hardly took any effort on my part to pry her away when she’d had enough.

I gathered Danny into my arms and held her close as my blood began to work it’s transformation on her. Rush stroked my hair as he slipped passed me and out the front door, closing it behind him. The rest of the family would be up soon, and I expect he wanted to get started on cleaning up whatever mess remained on the porch. While we’d never have to worry about McClellan again, he wasn’t likely to be the last vampire hunter to come after us, even if there were far fewer now than there had been in centuries past.

Danny had finally relaxed against me when I glanced up to find the twins eying us curiously, if understandingly. “Ask Rush,” I said. “And he could use your help disposing of McClellan’s body.” Hiram grinned slowly, and Jeremiah clapped him gently on the back before they both made their way out the door to help Rush.

Alone again, I hummed a little, then began softly singing to Danny as she rested and the transformation worked to completion. It was an old song I heard as a child. So long ago. Long, long before Danny was born. I’d sung it for her once before, when she’d had a nightmare. That was the first night we’d said we loved each other. It seemed fitting to sing it again now.

“So she’s joined the family, then.”

I turned my head back toward the kitchen to find the Matriarch leaning on her cane. She made her way into the sitting area and eased herself into the overstuffed chair she often treated as a throne.

“Well,” she said. “I knew it would happen sooner or later. A pity it means we lose her ability to be active during the day. But better to part with that than have you lose her entirely.”

My cheeks burned slightly, which made the Matriarch chuckle. “She’s a rare one, your Danny, loving you for you and not because of the magnetic hold we so often have over mortals.” The Matriarch chuckled again before standing. “I’ll leave you two for now. I’d best have someone down to the cellar to fetch something for when she wakes up hungry enough to drain a herd of cattle.” Her chuckle faded as she walked away. “Good thing we live in the middle of nowhere with no juicy villagers to tempt her.”

I shook my head. The Matriarch always made the same joke whenever the family gained a member. Even if some years we had lived closer to humans. She meant well enough, and she’d never guided us wrong.

Danny shifted in my arms, groaning softly. I brushed my lips against her forehead and she settled again. “Rest, my love,” I murmured. “We have all the time in the world now.”