The alley was a mess. Blood was everywhere. The beaten man lay on his side, whimpering. Whether from his injuries or what he had seen, Lisa didn't know. She was turning slowly in a circle, fingering the knife she had taken from 'freckles.' It was a spring assisted carbon fiber thing, covered in blood. Slowly Lisa came to a decision about how to deal with the mess.
Moving swiftly to each body, slicing the ragged cuts where her fangs had been. Three of the attackers were dead. Their bodies drained, slashes and bite markes all over. One was still breathing, unconscious, slumped against a wall where she had thrown him.
Once the cuts were made she pulled a cell phone protruding from one of the dead men's pockets. It was an old flip, poor condition. Lisa dialed 911 and left the phone open next to the whimpering victim. Then she ran.
Vampires distinguished their supernatural abilities into 5 categories. One category was that of Natural Enhancement. The superhuman strength, smell, sight, hearing, speed, all of these things were a normal function of the vampiric condition. They stemmed from predatory necessity and the disassociation of the body from the natural order of reality. In simple terms a vampire could move faster than a human because he thought he could and should, and for no other reason since the vampire's muscles did not function in any case.
Thus it was that when Lisa ran she didn't flit in a blur through the dark streets. Rather she moved at a more human pace, still fast, faster than most, but nothing special. This was weakness, she thought. I need to be faster, people are looking at me and they will remember the girl covered in blood.
She stopped in a side street to tend to a twisted ankle and lament the foolishness of running in such high heels. The ankle reset itself and she continued with her foolishness.
She arrived home at the small semi-detached house Heidi kept. The darkness and the hour concealed her from the neighbors as the entered. She went straight to her room in the basement and began quickly stripping her bloody clothes and throwing them on the carpeted floor in a pile. She then went into the basement bathroom, turned on the shower and let her hair out of its ponytail.
As the water ran Lisa caught a glimpse of herself in the mirror. A slim blond girl. Naked. Blood caked on her face and neck, down to her chest. She lifted a hand and began licking the blood off her fingers. It had splattered, in specks, everywhere that wasn't clothed too.
In the mirror, then, there was the thing that the men in the alley must've seen; A fanged terror, strength and bloodlust personified. And it was this reflection that brought the memories on in sharp clarity, ensuring she would never forget. Terror filled her heart and guilt joined with it making her nauseous. She kept licking her hand, the taste bringing the feelings tangibly closer to her heart.
It was a few minutes until her she stopped. Her index and middle finger were clean, only the strange vampire saliva coated her hand. Tears, again some not totally human fluid, rolled down her cheeks as she stepped into the shower. Hot water bathed her body, rinsing all traces of her crime down the drain. This only made her try the harder to remember, the faces of those killed, and not the first or last.
Lisa stayed in the shower for over an hour at least, she wasn't sure exactly, and then went back to her room and lay on the covers of her bed. She lay naked and spread eagle until dawn came and the oppressive heat of the sun's presence in the sky pulled her into slumber.
The officer looked around the hotel room, looked at the mess there. Actually the mess was only on the bed, the rest of the room was neat and tidy, as thought the maid had just been in and instead of leaving a chocolate mint on the pillow had left a dead girl on the bed.
There were forensics guys dancing about, taking pictures and bagging evidence. Another uniform was helping them while two detectives stared at the scene as though it were an interesting tableau from a Shakespearean play.
Officer Aida, however, just stood in the doorway. She was in shock. She recognized the girl lying on that bed. She'd seen the face on her own night stand. But it wouldn't do to tell the detectives. They didn't need to know who this girl's brother was.
Aida turned and left pretending that she needed some air as she passed the officers at the door. She went down to the lobby and phoned Marc. She got voicemail. Of course, she thought, he's asleep this time of day.
She dialed the house instead and got Maggie. "You've reached Joe's Taxidermy, you stiff 'em we stuff 'em," chirped the younger woman.
"It wasn't funny the first time, its not funny the next ten million," Aida replied. "I need you to go wake up Marc."
There was a pause on the other end. "Uh... Marc's with Andre..." Maggie said, caution in her voice. She knew how much Aida hated sharing Marc with Andre, or anyone for that matter.
Aida suppressed her frustration and jealousy to say, "Go and wake him. He needs to get out to the Wildeforte Hotel on the hill, today if possible. I'll be here." And then she hung up. She didn't want to talk to him while Andre did whatever it was they did in the background.
She went back upstairs to the fifth floor to do her job and wait for Marc. He might not hurry, but that was okay, investigations took time, and he would have no trouble getting into the morgue.
Lisa woke up as the sun set. Part of her longed to see the sunset again. Most of the stories she'd heard about vampires suggested that they longed for sunrise, but Lisa had always found sunrises boring. A sunset suggested a new adventure, some party you were going to or a date or quest; forbidden excitement at the expense of your parents. Sunrise suggested you were up too early and should go to bed.
It was a Sunday. It was one of the good Sunday too. Every other week Heidi took her to see her family. She couldn't talk to them of course, officially Lisa was dead, and it may have disturbed her parents to learn that their daughter was still walking in spite of this infirmity.
Still she lay in bed. The prospect of watching her brother and parents through a window was as nothing compared to the memory of last night.
She'd had accidents before, six months of feeding it was hard not to. Heidi taught her ways to prevent it. Never feed from the neck, or any other major artery. Be as gentle as possible while handling a living human. Don't piss someone off if you can't control their mind. These were her rules.
But the neck was the most obvious and easiest place to drink from, instinct screamed for it. Which was strange since the carotid artery provided much more blood than was necessary in seconds. Not to mention Lisa barely knew her own strength now. She was used to being a weakling fifteen year old, now she could put dents in steel with her head. As for controlling the human mind, she was still very inexperienced. She needed physical or eye contact just to get inside someone's head, and once there it was difficult not to get distracted by the other persons thought and feelings.
So, accidents had happened, and now the body count was up to five. And Lisa lay in bed.
It was a few minutes until her she stopped. Her index and middle finger were clean, only the strange vampire saliva coated her hand. Tears, again some not totally human fluid, rolled down her cheeks as she stepped into the shower. Hot water bathed her body, rinsing all traces of her crime down the drain. This only made her try the harder to remember, the faces of those killed, and not the first or last.
Lisa stayed in the shower for over an hour at least, she wasn't sure exactly, and then went back to her room and lay on the covers of her bed. She lay naked and spread eagle until dawn came and the oppressive heat of the sun's presence in the sky pulled her into slumber.
The officer looked around the hotel room, looked at the mess there. Actually the mess was only on the bed, the rest of the room was neat and tidy, as thought the maid had just been in and instead of leaving a chocolate mint on the pillow had left a dead girl on the bed.
There were forensics guys dancing about, taking pictures and bagging evidence. Another uniform was helping them while two detectives stared at the scene as though it were an interesting tableau from a Shakespearean play.
Officer Aida, however, just stood in the doorway. She was in shock. She recognized the girl lying on that bed. She'd seen the face on her own night stand. But it wouldn't do to tell the detectives. They didn't need to know who this girl's brother was.
Aida turned and left pretending that she needed some air as she passed the officers at the door. She went down to the lobby and phoned Marc. She got voicemail. Of course, she thought, he's asleep this time of day.
She dialed the house instead and got Maggie. "You've reached Joe's Taxidermy, you stiff 'em we stuff 'em," chirped the younger woman.
"It wasn't funny the first time, its not funny the next ten million," Aida replied. "I need you to go wake up Marc."
There was a pause on the other end. "Uh... Marc's with Andre..." Maggie said, caution in her voice. She knew how much Aida hated sharing Marc with Andre, or anyone for that matter.
Aida suppressed her frustration and jealousy to say, "Go and wake him. He needs to get out to the Wildeforte Hotel on the hill, today if possible. I'll be here." And then she hung up. She didn't want to talk to him while Andre did whatever it was they did in the background.
She went back upstairs to the fifth floor to do her job and wait for Marc. He might not hurry, but that was okay, investigations took time, and he would have no trouble getting into the morgue.
Lisa woke up as the sun set. Part of her longed to see the sunset again. Most of the stories she'd heard about vampires suggested that they longed for sunrise, but Lisa had always found sunrises boring. A sunset suggested a new adventure, some party you were going to or a date or quest; forbidden excitement at the expense of your parents. Sunrise suggested you were up too early and should go to bed.
It was a Sunday. It was one of the good Sunday too. Every other week Heidi took her to see her family. She couldn't talk to them of course, officially Lisa was dead, and it may have disturbed her parents to learn that their daughter was still walking in spite of this infirmity.
Still she lay in bed. The prospect of watching her brother and parents through a window was as nothing compared to the memory of last night.
She'd had accidents before, six months of feeding it was hard not to. Heidi taught her ways to prevent it. Never feed from the neck, or any other major artery. Be as gentle as possible while handling a living human. Don't piss someone off if you can't control their mind. These were her rules.
But the neck was the most obvious and easiest place to drink from, instinct screamed for it. Which was strange since the carotid artery provided much more blood than was necessary in seconds. Not to mention Lisa barely knew her own strength now. She was used to being a weakling fifteen year old, now she could put dents in steel with her head. As for controlling the human mind, she was still very inexperienced. She needed physical or eye contact just to get inside someone's head, and once there it was difficult not to get distracted by the other persons thought and feelings.
So, accidents had happened, and now the body count was up to five. And Lisa lay in bed.