Re: Qui vivra verra [Blaize]
Posted: 03 Feb 2018, 06:26
The door closed with a satisfying thud; the lone human paid no attention. People pulled up and got out of cars all the time. It was nothing out of the ordinary. Why should he think that he was the object of scrutiny, or that he was to be someone’s prey? If all went well and Darcy did not have to shoulder the same curses as Blaize, the guy would wake up in a few hours a little disoriented but ultimately okay.
Blaize would follow Darcy. Close enough to intervene should he need to, to offer whatever advice he was able, but far enough away that she would be left to her own devices, able to rely upon her own instinct.
”The throat, the wrist – it doesn’t matter what part of the body you go for but in the end it’s just easier if it’s from a main artery,” he said. He could know this, despite his own unwillingness to feed. Because despite his unwillingness, he’d still had to feed, and had enough experience to offer this advice.
Where most might find that first pump of hot blood upon one’s tongue to be blissful, like the first bite of dinner after a long hard day at work, Blaize hated it. No, he liked it too much. No, he couldn’t quite figure out how it made him feel, but it never settled well. Not in his gut, not in his heart, or his mind; it was an odd poison that got under his skin and he didn’t know what he’d done or who he was deep down to have deserved the difficulty.
”I’ll follow,” he said, nodding toward the lone human. He didn’t try for reassurances; Darcy didn’t seem like she needed them.
Blaize would follow Darcy. Close enough to intervene should he need to, to offer whatever advice he was able, but far enough away that she would be left to her own devices, able to rely upon her own instinct.
”The throat, the wrist – it doesn’t matter what part of the body you go for but in the end it’s just easier if it’s from a main artery,” he said. He could know this, despite his own unwillingness to feed. Because despite his unwillingness, he’d still had to feed, and had enough experience to offer this advice.
Where most might find that first pump of hot blood upon one’s tongue to be blissful, like the first bite of dinner after a long hard day at work, Blaize hated it. No, he liked it too much. No, he couldn’t quite figure out how it made him feel, but it never settled well. Not in his gut, not in his heart, or his mind; it was an odd poison that got under his skin and he didn’t know what he’d done or who he was deep down to have deserved the difficulty.
”I’ll follow,” he said, nodding toward the lone human. He didn’t try for reassurances; Darcy didn’t seem like she needed them.