After Kira had offered the telepath a place to stay and had taught him the basics of what it meant to be a vampire, Oscar had struck out on his own; he wasn’t only exploring a relatively new city, but was exploring his own limits, too. Limits that grew with each passing day. Each new day brought with it new lessons, which he stumbled through in a solitude that he had built for himself – or perhaps it had something to do with the mess of his hair and the wideness of his bright eyes, always searching for magic. He looked… well, just a little bit insane. It didn’t help that he paid no mind to the weather, nor the fact that it was freezing outside. He wore only a single layer, and barely bothered with coats anymore. Sure, he was cold. Cold to the touch, but his skin was cold regardless. So he didn’t see the point.
Although Oscar did not need to eat, he want to bars and cafes anyway. Diners were his favourite. He’d go and sit in booths across from others who sat alone. He’d stare at them, unblinking; he’d hack into their minds and rifle through their memories, plucking major incidents like candy from a jar. It had nothing to do with time, or sitting outside of time (though he did a lot of that, too). It was an addiction, curiosity getting the better of him.
The little girl eating a banana sundae was completely innocent, her memories as sweet as the dessert she was eating. Her biggest, most lustrous memory was only from two weeks ago. Christmas. It was still so fresh in her mind; she’d got a new puppy. A little Jack Russell, all fluff and yips. Though buried beneath the fresh, sweet memory was bitterness – Oscar delved a little deeper. Night time. She was walking down the hallway to the bathroom, rubbing her eyes. She heard a noise from her parent’s bedroom, so she went to investigate. The memory was blurred, tinged with misunderstanding. The little girl wouldn’t have known what was happening, but the man who’d hijacked her brain was fully aware – the woman her father was having sex with was not her mother.
Oscar knew this, because the little girl was sitting with her parents. He’d heard her call them ‘Mummy’ and ‘Daddy’. Daddy was glaring at Oscar, who’d been staring at the little girl. Tammy, her name was. The man got up, sliding out of his booth. He took two steps toward Oscar, who looked up at him and smiled.
“I think it’s best you leave, buddy,” he said, and Oscar’s smile faltered.
“Why?” Oscar asked, completely oblivious.
“You’re creeping out my little girl. Are you some kind of pervert? You should leave, before I put my fist through your face,” he threatened. He might have been cheating on the girl’s mother, but at least he still cared for his child. At least he was still protective. Oscar blinked and stood, shaking his head.
“A broken home is no place for a sweet girl like yours. I think you should stop cheating on your wife…” Oscar said. Advice, he thought. He thought he was doing the right thing. The right thing earned him…you guessed it! A fist to the face. Blood spurted from his nose. Oscar lifted a hand to his nose, and stared at the blood on his fingers. Fascinated. Blood. He’d need some of that soon. Blood. Who’d have thought he’d like it so much?
”I mean… it didn’t quite go through…” he said, proper English accent contrary to his appearance. This, of course, earned Oscar another fist to the face. It was a little like poking the bear, however – a bear who’d been minding his own business, happy to meander on his way without hurting a soul. But now that poor little Tammy would have a new memory to add to her collection – not something sweet or bitter, but scary. Terrifying. She got to witness a vampire tearing into her father’s neck in the middle of a family diner.