So this was tragically not his enemy, but an actual dead body.
Such a disappointment. He had been hoping for something that pertained to himself. Instead, only more humans—
The crashing sound of somebody stumbling into the darkness had him clicking off his flashlight, his senses going on high alert.
Even with the stench from his friend with the meat-hook bow tie, the copper scent of fresh blood preceded whoever it was. As did the grunting of the wounded.
Awww. Someone had a boo-boo.
The flailing continued as sirens announced the Caldwell police’s arrival—but the sounds were muffled, suggesting that the new arrival to the kitchen had had the presence of mind to shut them in together.
“Fuck!”
His visitor sent some of those empty plastic containers flying as he ran into the counter. Then there was more cursing. A groan as if he were laying himself down, likely on that stretch of stainless steel. Then shallow panting.
Losing patience with the entire drama, Xcor stepped free of the refrigerator. Unlike the injured gang member, he had some idea of the layout, and he managed to zero in on the guy, thanks to his hearing and a memory of where the center island was.
Things would have been much easier with sight, however. Apart from the obvious benefits of orientation, he did not enjoy the weightless feeling that came with blindness, nor the fact that he had to rely on his ears and sense of smell to navigate. There was also the reality that anything could be in front of his feet, ready to trip him up.
But he made it over toward the stricken human.
“You are not alone,” Xcor drawled into the darkness.
“What! Oh, God! Who—”
“Do I sound like one of your own?” He was careful to roll the R a little longer than he usually would, just in case his Old Language accent was not perfectly clear.
More breathing. Heavy, very heavy. Accompanied by the acrid smell of true terror.
“You humans…” Xcor took a couple more steps forward, no longer bothering to muffle the fall of his boots. “The problem with you is that you have no true enemies. You fight amongst yourselves over the blocks of city streets or the lines of countries, because there is nothing external to unite you. My kind, conversely? We have an enemy that necessitates a certain cohesion.”
Not enough to forestall his crown-ish ambitions, however.
At this point, the human started talking gibberish. Or mayhap that was a prayer of some sort?
Such weakness. It was deplorable—and exploitable as a moral imperative.
Xcor flicked on his flashlight.
In its beam, the gang member jerked around, his bloodstained body wiping clean a section of the countertop.
Plasma … as good as Windex, evidently.
Wide eyes strained the confines of their sockets, and hard breathing whistled out of an open mouth, the former tough guy taken down multiple pegs as pain and fear sliced his bravado into nothing but a memory.
“You should know that there are others who walk amongst you,” Xcor said in a low voice. “Like, but not the same. And we are always watching.”
The man cringed away, not that there was far to go. The counter was a workspace for cutlery and sieves, not a mattress for a grown-ass man.
Any more of that and he was going to end up on the floor.
“Who … who are you?”
“Mayhap a visual rather than a description shall suffice.”
Baring his fangs, Xcor tipped up the flashlight and put his face within the illumination.
The loud scream was high-pitched, and did not last. Thanks to the overwhelming adrenal response, the man passed out cold, the stink of urine that wafted up suggesting he’d lost control of his functions.
Rather amusing, really.
Xcor moved quickly, navigating with ease over to the door, thanks to the flashlight. Assuming position against the wall, he clicked off the beam and let that scream draw its proper attention.
The Caldwell Police Department responded with admirable efficiency, a number of the officers throwing open the door, their own flashlights piercing through the dense darkness.
The instant they saw the gang member, they rushed forward, and that was Xcor’s cue for a departure.
As he slipped out the door, he heard the word vampire rise up through a chaos of conversation—and thus it was with a smile that he dematerialized out of the way of the crowd.
Back in the Old Country, he and his Band of Bastards had kept the speculations and myths going by showing themselves from time to time, always to individuals, and ever in ways that fit the misconceptions that humans had of the species.
Defilers of virgins. Sources of evil that slept in coffins. Monsters of the night.
Such pish—although the latter did indeed pertain to himself.
And in truth, it felt good to do something similar here in Caldwell, rather as a dog marks its territory. Enjoyable, too, to give the irrelevance on that kitchen island something to haunt his memory during all his upcoming days in prison.