Vampyres of Hollywood

Vampyres of Hollywood

Vampyres of Hollywood

Vampyres of Hollywood

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Overview

Film, television and Broadway star Adrienne Barbeau and New York Times bestselling author Michael Scott have teamed up to deliver this sexy, scary, and deliciously clever novel full of Hollywood glamour, behind-the-scenes secrets, and the truly bloodthirsty reality of Tinseltown. So grab some popcorn and some holy water and lose yourself in the high-stakes, back-stabbing world of the Vampyres of Hollywood.

Hollywood, California: Three gruesome deaths within two weeks and every one of them a major star - an Oscar winner, an ingénue, and an action hero. A serial killer is working through the Hollywood A-list and celebrities are running scared.

Each crime scene is worthy of a classic horror movie, and all three victims share a connection to the powerful scream queen, Ovsanna Moore. The stunning and formidable Moore is the legendary head of a Hollywood studio, as well as the writer and star of seventeen blockbuster horror films (and a few that went straight to DVD).

She's also a 500 year old vampyre… but this is Hollywood after all, and no one ever looks their age.

Beverly Hills Police Detective Peter King knows a lot about the City of Angels, but he certainly doesn't know that most of the famous actors in town are actually an established network of vampires. Or that secretive and seductive Ovsanna Moore happens to be their CEO.

Moore and King may be from opposite sides of the Hollywood Hills, but both have something to gain by stopping the killer who the tabloids have dubbed the Cinema Slayer. Ovsanna must protect her vampire legacy and her production schedule, while King just wants to keep his Beverly Hills beat as blood-free as possible. But when the horror queen and the cop with the movie star looks form an unholy alliance, sparks fly and so do the creatures of the night.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781429991865
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 03/26/2024
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 340
Sales rank: 248,075
File size: 591 KB

About the Author

About The Author

As a film, television, and Broadway star, ADRIENNE BARBEAU 's career spans forty years. Genre fans know her from The Fog, Creepshow, Swamp Thing, and Escape From New York. She was nominated for a Tony for creating the role of Rizzo in "Grease" and starred as Maude's daughter in the hit series Maude and as Ruthie the Snake Dancer in HBO's Carnivale. She is the author of the best-selling memoir "There Are Worse Things I Could Do."

MICHAEL SCOTT is one of Ireland's most prolific authors. His recent books include The Sorceress, the third installment of New York Times bestselling series, The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel.

Read an Excerpt

Vampyres of Hollywood


By Adrienne Barbeau, Michael Scott

St. Martin's Press

Copyright © 2008 Adrienne Barbeau and Michael Scott
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4299-9186-5


CHAPTER 1

They don't call me the Scream Queen for nothing. "Where is he?" I shouted, and everyone who wasn't deaf, drunk, or dead heard me. "Where the fuck is Travis now?"

I did a hard twist in the air so I could scan the soundstage behind me. I was strapped into a safety harness forty feet up, desperate to go to the bathroom and royally pissed.

Yes, I do need to go to the bathroom occasionally, just not as often as the rest of you. And it isn't pretty. A diet of red blood and raw meat will do that to you.

No one answered me. Below me an entire crew, seventy people at least, hustled around like they knew what they were doing and, whatever it was, it was so important they hadn't heard me shout. Most of them had worked with me for a long time. They knew I rarely shouted, and when I did, someone was about to get his ass reamed. They also knew that my temper was legendary.

Finally, Candy, the 2nd. AD, raised her head and looked up at me. I swear she should have been acting in this film instead of assistant directing — I've worked with stars who couldn't show as much fear in their face. She's an adorable little freckle-faced pixie with a featherweight boxer's body and macho attitude to match. The attitude was fast disappearing. And this was only her second week.

"I'm sorry, Ms. Moore. Mr. Travis said his blood sugar was low and he needed a protein bar from his trailer. I offered to send a PA, but he insisted he'd be right back."

"In the middle of a scene? This fucking scene! I'm hanging up here like Amish laundry flapping in the wind and he walks off the set! Is he fucking nuts?!" I spun in the harness. "Goddammit, Tony, get me out of this thing." Tony Tanner motioned to Jamie Long, and together my stunt co-coordinator and stunt double started lowering me down without a word.

I was halfway to the ground when Neville Travis, the boy-wonder director, object of my unmitigated rage, strolled casually back onto the soundstage, a cell phone pressed to his ear. Even at fifty feet, I could see the traces of white powder under the nail of his right pinkie finger. His eyes were dancing like Maria Tallchief in Firebird.

"Hey, Ovsanna, what are you coming down for, we've got two more setups in this scene." He was smiling, for God's sake. A lamb to the slaughter. A coked-up lamb ... about to be spit and roasted.

"I may have two more setups, Neville, but you don't. In fact, I have the rest of this film to shoot, but you don't." Tony and Jamie dropped me gently to the floor. I unbuckled the harness and let it drop to the ground while I drew myself up to my full height — which, at five feet, six inches, is not very full. It still put me eye to eye with the little turd. I put my hands on my hips and pushed out my chest — and that brought him to a halt. "We are two days behind schedule. Two full days, Travis. Now I don't know what it's like in MTV-land, but losing two days on an Ovsanna Moore film is enough to send you back to whatever junior college you managed to get through. Nobody walks out on me in the middle of a take, do you understand that? Nobody!"

"What do you mean? What do you mean? You're firing me?" The coke was making him reckless and overconfident. He went for overfamiliarity, which I despise. "Ovsanna ... hey, Ovsanna, sweetheart, baby, I wasn't walking out on you, I just needed a candy bar, you know, for my blood sugar."

"You needed candy, all right, but not for your blood sugar. Wipe your nose, Neville; you've got white stuff all over it. And don't ever call me baby." I turned and headed for my trailer. At a look from me, Shaheed, our 1st. AD, called lunch. I swear I never saw a set empty so quickly.

Travis trailed after me. One of the curses of my kind is a heightened sense of smell and hearing. Those senses served us well thousands of years ago, warning of intruders, keeping my Dakhanavar Clan alive. Normally I manage to filter out the extra input. But not today. Rage messes with my control. I could smell Neville Travis: the Abercrombie cologne, the failing deodorant, the fungus between his toes, and the dried blood in his septum. I didn't mind the blood so much but the fungus made me want to puke. And I can't do that; my kind has no gag reflex.

Neville's voice turned wheedling. "Listen, Ovsanna, you were wonderful in that take. You know that. I didn't think you even needed me there, you're so good. Hey, come on, we'll finish lunch and then speed through the day's schedule, maybe even grab a couple of shots we owe from yesterday."

I didn't look over my shoulder, didn't even raise my voice, but on the empty set it rang and echoed off the bare floor. "You finish your lunch, Neville. And enjoy it. Because it's the last one you're having around here." I walked up the steps of my trailer and closed the door behind me.

Maral McKenzie, my personal assistant, was at the desk in the back room. We'd converted it from a bedroom into an office when the production company bought the trailer for me three movies ago. I didn't like sleeping back there; I'd rather stretch out on the sofa in the living room so I can hear what's going on outside and know when the DGA trainee is coming to get me. That's the advantage of being Clan Dakhanavar — I can hear conversations all over the lot. I get a kick out of opening the door a fraction of a second before he knocks just to see the surprise on his face.

Maral was looking beautiful in a bizarrely cut black and white suit, Dolce & Gabbana probably. She's twenty-eight and she's been with me almost ten years. She's Warm, and one of the few outside the clan who knows the truth and still loves me in spite of it. Or maybe because of it. That's one of the few things she's never told me; maybe she doesn't know herself. She had her titanium Mac Pro up and running and I could see a version of my Web site on the screen. Probably answering letters posted to the guest book page or updating the "personal" blog I never write. She raised a razor-sharp eyebrow in a silent question.

"Get DeWitte on the phone. I want Travis out of here and off the set. I'll direct this damn movie myself if I have to."

"It may not be that easy." Maral's managed to lose most of her accent, which hails from somewhere between the Louisiana swamps and Jackson Square. A Cajun girl with a Scottish last name — go figure.

"Why not? What do you know that I don't?" I was having trouble with the zipper on my costume and she came over to help. I turned my back on her and raised my arms. The zipper hissed down and the leather and lace costume slid away. I stepped out of it and Maral draped a silk dressing gown over my shoulders.

"Travis is Thomas DeWitte's fair-haired boy. Mr. DeWitte thinks he can do no wrong."

"Yeah? Has he seen him on the set?" I turned to face Maral. "It's a wonder he hasn't caught his cock in the clapper. I doubt he's even looked at the budget for this movie."

"DeWitte's been championing him all over town. Word is that Embassy is ready to hire him as soon as we wrap. You fire Travis and Thomas DeWitte's got shit on his hands."

"Oh, brother. Don't tell me. ... Thomas is sleeping with him, isn't he?"

Maral shrugged. "Possibly." I was staring at her. "Probably." I raised my eyebrows. "Definitely."

"God damn it." I stretched out on the couch and closed my eyes. "Set up a meeting. We need to remind Thomas DeWitte just who calls the shots around here. Remind him that I'm the senior partner in Anticipation Studios, not him. He's still only head of development. I walk and he's finished."

"I'm not sure he'll see it that way."

"Well, he should. Besides, he needs to remember his history. If it weren't for me, he'd still be making porno down in Tijuana."

Maral had my costume in her hands, ready to hang it in the closet. She turned back to me and stared. "I didn't know he was a director."

"Actor, dear, actor. You've never seen Going Down on the Titanic? Check my video collection; I think I've got the uncut version."

She shook her head and laughed. "I didn't know he had it in him."

Score one for me. ... I bit my tongue and didn't rise to the bait. A half hour later the smell of Neville coming across the lot brought me back to consciousness. Usually I close my eyes for ten minutes, go into a deep sleep for five of those, and awaken refreshed and ready for the next scene. A half hour is a luxury I don't often get. Maral had helped me take advantage of this one.

She stood up from the couch, buttoned the sleeve of her suit, and handed me a Kleenex for my mouth. My relationship with Maral is discussed ad infinitum in the gossip rags, but no reporter has even come close to the truth. The tissue came away red. She took it from me, folded it, smiled and flushed it down the toilet.

Neville knocked. Maral looked to me for an answer.

"Let him in." I sat up on the couch, closed my robe and threw my boots on the chair across from me. He could come in, but he wasn't going to sit.

Neville's eyes were red. I couldn't tell if it was the coke or if he'd been crying. I didn't smell any weed, just his sweat. I stared at him, curious to see which approach he'd take. He'd already tried bonhomie and wheedling. My guess was he'd try for a straight-out apology and an excuse.

"Look, Ms. Moore, I, uh ... I ... well, I'm really sorry I ran out like that. I, uh, I just ... wasn't feeling well and I needed some, you know, like a protein bar or something so I could concentrate."

"You're just not going to cop to the truth, are you, Neville?"

"The truth?" I watched his eyes widen and knew, before he opened his mouth, that he was about to lose it. Evidently attacking his veracity was enough to make him forget all he'd ever directed were music videos for mediocre bands. Suddenly he thought he was Tarantino. He put his balled fists on his hips. "The truth is you're being a fucking prima donna, and if I want to leave the set —"

I cut him off. "Let's not get into a pissing contest, Neville. You wanted to leave the set? Fine. You want to shove powder up your nose? That's fine, too. You can do it on your own time. Leave. I'm shutting down production for the rest of the day. It will give me the time I need to find your replacement."

His voice went up a notch, along with his arrogance. "I've got a contract, Ovsanna. Thomas DeWitte himself —"

Maral stepped in, her voice just this side of glacial. "Your contract is with Anticipation Studios ... which Ms. Moore controls. Thomas DeWitte is the head of development and is answerable to Ms. Moore. As are you." She backed him out the door and closed it with a solid click, reminding me once again how much I'd like to Turn her. She has the potential for becoming one of my greatest creations. If only she weren't so valuable to me Warm. She looked at me, eyebrows raised in a silent question.

"Tell Shaheed to send everyone home. I'll absorb the cost. I can use the time to do some rewrites on the transformation scene, anyway. Did you manage to get Thomas on the phone?"

"He's got another new secretary — the third this month — and she said he left this morning for a creative meeting with some new talent."

"What does that mean, exactly?"

"Well, she was new enough and stupid enough to tell me where he was going."

"Did you trick her? Or bully her."

"I allowed her to volunteer that he was supposed to have breakfast at the Abbey and then look into a new S&M dungeon in Boys Town. He told her it was business, he was scouting locations."

"Any S&M movies in production that you can think of?"

"None that DeWitte has anything to do with. And nothing to do with Anticipation. I got the impression that this was personal rather than business."

"Shit. There go my rewrites." I finished dressing and pulled on my boots.

Maral looked at me quizzically.

"The last time DeWitte visited an S&M dungeon, he conducted meetings standing up for more than a week."

And in three days' time, on Saturday, a group of indecently wealthy Japanese investors were flying in to discuss a new project and a potential merger. I needed DeWitte focused. And seated. At the very least, he'd better be able to bow.

CHAPTER 2

BEVERLY HILLS 10:30 A.M.


There are days when I hate being a cop.

I hate the petty bullshit. I despise the bureaucracy, the endless rules, the forms. And I have a real hard-on for psychological profiles. If you ask me, they're not worth the paper they're printed on. Like the one on the table in front of me.

"Obsessive ... white male ... probably collects movie memorabilia ... lives alone ... could be a movie extra or failed screenwriter."

Well, dammit: that could be me. Except for the screenwriting part. It could also be a good twenty percent of West Hollywood.

These profiles are useless. I once spent a full afternoon going over cases I'd closed, comparing the perps to the profiles the department's resident shrink presented me with when I first started the investigations. You know how many times she came anywhere close? Six out of eleven. And she got the sex wrong on one of those.

Not that she's a bad shrink, she's not — well, based on what little I know from seeing her when Jenny and I pulled the plug. No, it's the profiling system itself. I just don't buy it. And if I took it seriously, I'd never make a collar. It's just another example of Hollywood stretching the truth.

Don't get me wrong, I love watching B. D. Wong do his stuff on SVU and the girl with the blue eyes on the Profiler reruns and Robson Green in Wire in the Blood on BBC, but come on, real life ain't like that. Real detective work is slogging around in bad air and unhealthy temperatures, getting the truth out of people. Or getting lucky. The best detectives I know are just plain lucky.

I dropped the profile back on the table and added more sugar to my espresso. Across the counter, Reynaldo watched the white crystals dissolve in the brown sludge.

"Peter, do you want I should just give you the sugar jar, you can add a couple of drops of coffee and eat it with a spoon?" With a little weight on him he could have been Agador in The Birdcage.

"Get off my back, Reynaldo. You're lucky I come in here at all. If I didn't hate all that 'double-grande whipped non-fat-soy' B.S. over at Starbucks, I'd take my business to one of the three down the block."

"Ooo, sweetie. Not in a good mood today, I see. I'll just leave you to your detecting, Officer King." He started away and turned back. "I keep hoping you'll want to investigate me. You wouldn't need to add sugar."

"Are you propositioning an officer of the law, Reynaldo? Do I need to get my nightstick?"

"Oh, promises, promises." He went dancing to the other end of the counter to serve two thirty-somethings in sweats and ponytails. I couldn't tell if they were male or female. And I'm the detective.

I finished the coffee and left a dollar on the table for Reynaldo. He settles for that 'cause he knows damn well I'm not going to take him up on his offer. Ten years I've been drinking espresso in California Coffee on Beverly Drive. Ten years Reynaldo's been making a pass. It's nice to have certain things you can count on.

Not that there's that much that changes in my job. Beverly Hills isn't exactly a hotbed of crime. Last year we had eighty-three larceny cases, nineteen burglaries, a couple of vehicle thefts, robberies, aggravated assaults, and one rape. No murders. I spend my time smuggling drunken starlets past the paparazzi and settling celebrity nightclub altercations without unwanted publicity. I'm good at that. I know how to keep my mouth shut. And I know how to do my job. After fifteen years with the Beverly Hills Police Force, I should. I even got asked to be a technical adviser on L.A. Undercover — a piece-of-shit series UPN ran for a season before they went under. "Real Cops, Really Undercover" was the tag. They should have put a tarp over it and covered it for good. But what the hell ... I got paid. Even better, I got my name on screen and on IMDb. That's what matters in this town.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Vampyres of Hollywood by Adrienne Barbeau, Michael Scott. Copyright © 2008 Adrienne Barbeau and Michael Scott. Excerpted by permission of St. Martin's Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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