A Friday. And by all accounts, not a particularly special day – save for the fact that it was the end of another working week. After just a few hours of mind-numbing toil, the average folk could throw off their shackles of obligation and embrace freedom once again.This thread is back-dated to February 23rd 2018
He didn’t know what that felt like, though. Not really.
Even when he was among them, he was never really among them. There was always that invisible line; a wall that separated him from society. A set of moral codes, unspoken rules, and grave penalties reminded him to keep away from that line. But it was never as sombre as it sounded; the indoctrinated never bleat about their lifestyles.
They were better than everyone else. They were awake, they knew the truth, and they were powerful because of it. They had their fingers on the pulse of the world and could sever those veins or leech from them inconspicuously. Whatever they wanted. And he had worked hard – fought hard – to sit at the table of the most worthy amongst those who were the most worthy.
Until it all fell apart.
He could blame a lot of things, a lot of people. He could have pointed the finger at any one of the problems – hell, he’d had long enough to think about it now. But it always came back around. In the end, he knew who and what was responsible for everything that had happened to him. But for once in his long life, he had no idea how to fix it.
His footprints were ash, his home a cemetery. He had nothing and no one left to remember him. To the woken eyes of the world, he was a dead man. Except he wasn’t. He couldn’t be. He didn’t know how to set his soul to rest. He’d spent twelve months in shadows, but remained separate from it.
In all that time he’d expected to go crazy, to start hearing voices – maybe he could have learned something, maybe some of those voices would have had some helpful suggestions. He was open to debate. After such a long spell of silence, he would have welcomed the break from the monotony. But ultimately there was nothing.
It was just him and the darkness. And he was tired of it.
The process wasn’t clear, the granular details remained elusive, but the facts – for what they were – spelt it out for him. Levi D’Amico had returned from the fire and the fade. Though, the reality wasn’t as triumphant as it all suggested. It was less of a phoenix rising and more of the shallow start to a zombie apocalypse. Because just like those reanimated cadavers, he no longer had a purpose to live, just a hunger he had to satisfy.
Impossibly silent footsteps carried him forward. The darkness stripped away and the world pieced itself together as if it finally remembered how to just be again. A cement road rolled out like carpet, brick built itself upon brick, became embedded with pitch and golden glass, and stretched out to reach all around him until it met a navy sky. And as he approached the open maw between these two spire-like buildings that had built out of nothing, the perfumed melody of a bustling metropolis flooded in.
Like visiting an old memory, Levi paused to absorb the scene. He had not seen a semblance of light in around a year and now a fog of colour and movement breathed and waltzed and yelled about him. An animal – whether prey or predator – might have cowered or retreated at this sudden assault on the senses, but Levi felt nothing, not even enough to comprehend why he didn’t feel it.
The staunch Italian stood for several unblinking seconds. Passers-by gave him a wide berth, threw a glance, and made a comment or two. Society couldn’t blame them for their reactions; they had witnessed what looked to be a six foot two mannequin appear suddenly at the perimeter of an alleyway. With skin the nature of granite, eyes as dark as umber, and a black suit that shaped him in stiff angles, the only thing to suggest he was sentient was the dishevelled mass of black hair that framed his surly face.
By the time a fifth person had walked past and struck him with a wary glance, Levi had shaken off the nostalgia. His eyes followed theirs, causing his head to turn as if he’d been snared by a fishing wire. Yet when the connection broke and the passer-by quickened their pace to flee the area, Levi was still watching them. He watched until they became just another face in the crowd, a face he wouldn’t remember, before his focus snapped back to the world in front of him.
He clenched a fist and felt the tingle of misfiring nerves graze the inside of his palm before coming to rest beneath the cuff of his grim white shirt. This familiar thing wrenched the corner of his dry lips upward, and he tested the sensation again and again as if its presence could anchor the thought of existence to him. It was a funny scenario to be in; to be alive when dead and to be the same even when everything else had changed.
Levi had never seen the benefit of living in the past, actually. There was certainly merit in learning from history, but becoming a relic – something that had been, had its time, and lost its use – nah, that wasn’t for him. He had always had one eye on the past, his feet in the present, and one eye on the future. But figuring out the future wasn’t always so straightforward. Clairvoyance wasn’t a skill he had been born with, but he had learned to tap into the flits and flickers of the world’s pulse, to learn its rhythm, and get an idea of what could be.
He had never shaken his first premonition.
He had seen that it would come down to a choice. And in the end, Levi knew that he was connected to that man through death just as much as they’d been connected through life. One affected the other. It demanded the other. He’d never had a choice. He couldn’t be one giant disappointment. Not again. Because it had always been a game in that man’s eyes; their lives, their souls, their wants, dreams, and ******* fears. Everything was a paradigm toward success and failure, toward moving forward and being stuck where you were.
Standing still never got you anywhere. So the Italian started to move again. He joined the fog of light and colour, becoming a stain on it, and stirring through it like a shark through a bait ball. There were other predators in the mix – just like what they say about always being six feet from a rat; the same was true of Vampiri. And while these blood suckers always seemed to be aware of one another, it didn’t always amount to anything where the umber-eyed man was concerned. Besides, his thoughts were trained on old habits, such as working up a check list in his head.
Action number one: acquire cigarettes.
While the Italian always had a preference for Marlboro, he would just about smoke rolled up fig leaves from the Garden of Eden. He wouldn’t call their condition into question either. It was difficult to state with any certainty that those toxins affected him in the same way that they used to, but he’d been smoking since he was thirteen and it was a habit more ingrained in him than making check lists.
Action number two: feed.
A Vampiro can withhold his appetite for only so long. In Levi’s case, he had mostly avoided drinking from humans. There had been an unfortunate event around the night of his turning, resulting in a small unit of soldiers being expunged from history, but he validated this act as one made by a youth. Of course, he had savaged a few unwitting fools in his time as well, but their exsanguination was out of rage, not hunger. And it certainly had never been a case of losing control.
Action number three: find shelter.
It would no longer do to return to familiar haunts, but neither could he remain exposed. He would need a base of operations again. But as thoughts strayed to what he would be defending, it became gravely apparent that a fourth action would not be so easy to prescribe and tag a checkbox to.
In business, having no ******* clue what you are doing and deciding to trial and error your way through, is called a discovery phase. The success of these phases is predicated on having a place to start, understanding the way forward by testing and learning, and having a steely will to obtain that ultimate goal (once you have learned what that is, of course). In the meantime, the Vampiro understood three basic needs and was determined to find the fourth in due time. He would find his niche again; he was patient, talented, obstinate, and had nothing left to lose.
And besides, if you can justify spending an entire year dreaming in shadows, you can justify getting a packet of cigarettes as your first port of call.
With the deftness and speed of a sweeping gull assaulting a beachgoer over a deep-fried treat, Levi had managed to lift a stranger’s wallet from their unguarded pocket, disguising the theft with a stiff collision of shoulders. Without breaking pace, Levi examined the contents of the leather binder and retained but a fistful of cash before discarding it. Whether the victim became aware of this brazen act or not was no longer within the same realm of the Vampiro’s concerns for umber eyes had spied a convenience store just five feet ahead.