It's hard to narrow down exactly what I love about this series. Each book has shown me more and more about Michael and Wild Bill's inner strengths, vulnerabilities, and their weaknesses. Each book has held me enthralled with where the author has taken me on these characters’ journey. And each book has left me wondering if I can guess where it's all going to end up. 'Fluid' is book eight and is in Wild Bill's point of view.
Michael and Wild Bill have hung around in Milwaukee for about a month now. Michael has gotten a part-time job at an all-night emergency vet clinic, and they're living in a week-by-week motel. Seems almost domestic for them and I started to wonder if that's where the author was headed. I shouldn't have thought. I should've just kept reading. Michael and Wild Bill go to an artsy gallery showing where they end up posing for the gallery owner and his camera. Well, it's more than posing and who knew Michael had such an exhibitionist streak? After they liberate a pint of blood from him, they spot a female vamp heading out the door with a human. Michael decides to follow in case she's a bad vamp, and Wild Bill follows Michael to make sure nothing wrong happens.
Turns out the kid lives on a houseboat and he's not exactly what he says he is. Vamps don't do water, by the way. Showers? Fine. Baths? Okay, maybe. Creeks, lakes, rivers, seas, oceans? Not on your life. Against his very will, Wild Bill ends up on this houseboat to convince this kid that vamps are real, yadda, yadda, yadda. The kid happens to be another Van Helsing and Wild Bill almost dies. Michael saves him, but it brings about the talk they should've already had. You know, the one about Michael killing bad vampires and Wild Bill not wanting him to kill anybody. Oh yeah. That talk.
This was a dramatic addition to the series, although that isn't saying a whole lot, since every story has been filled with drama. But here Michael is pondering whether what they're doing, with trying to warn people about vampirism and teach vamps how to get blood safely, is even worth it or whether they're just spinning their wheels. Wild Bill comes to the realization that, no matter what, Michael is all he needs and wants. My sad face is getting worse because now there are only two books left.