BACKDATED October 2017
[LAKENNA]
“I don’t think I’m ready to go home.”
It hadn’t been the first time she had made that statement, and still, it didn’t change anything. She knew, just as Craven did, that she didn’t have a choice. There were bills to pay, lawyers to speak to, boxes to be packed – and yet, as the car turned onto the quiet suburban street, she wanted to scream. Dropping her head back against the leather of the seat, she closed her eyes to block out the mansion as the car rolled closer, as if by just willing it away, it would disappear. “We can still turn around, right?”
Even as she spoke the words, she felt the car come to a stop, the sound of the shift switching into park sounding as if her sister had just signed her fate. Swallowing past the razorblades within her throat, she forced her eyes to open, the blue shimmering with tears as she finally drank in the only home she had ever known. The manor that had once been filled with life now stood ominous, the curtains drawn, and the doors barricaded closed. There had never been a day when there wasn’t some form of life bustling about the grounds; the gardener, the groundskeeper, or even the dogs. There had always been someone to greet them when they pulled into the drive, but just like the day her father had died, it seemed the life had been literally siphoned from the world. No joy, no light, no love.
There was nothing left but pure and utter desolation.
“He’s not there,” she whispered, though this time, it was clear she wasn’t speaking to anyone in particular. Releasing a quiet sigh, she forced her unsteady fingers to uncurl from the cracked plastic of her Starbuck’s cup, the frozen coffee all but forgotten as it melted. She hadn’t even bothered to take a sip, every time the straw had met her lips; it had only been chewed into pieces. Paying it no mind, she settled it in the cup holder as she searched for the handle. She hesitated for a second, a single tear escaping to trail down a puffy cheek. She knew she looked like complete ****. Her eyes were swollen and red, her lips torn from the hours she spent chewing them into oblivion, her hair an uncombed mess. Even the clothes she wore, a single white t-shirt and a pair of oversized sweatpants screamed her despair to the world. “I’ll see you later, okay? Love you,” she breathed as she finally opened the door.
The cool autumn air danced across her skin as she eased from the passenger seat, her body mimicking that of an elderly lady instead of a twenty-three year old girl. Slamming the door shut behind her, she tipped her head back to gaze at the silent manor, her tongue trailing over the edge of her teeth. She knew he would want her to go inside, pack his things, and go on with her life. It was what he had always told her, yet, she felt as if was a sinking ship. Try as she might, she couldn’t stay above the water, and she couldn’t will her feet to move. Behind her, she listened to the car idle, and she knew that she wasn’t alone. It was that thought that propelled her forward, her breath locked in her lungs. Each step had her trembling, her tears falling freely now. By the time she had reached the door, she had dissolved into a complete wreck, her fingers shaking as she tried over and over to key in her pass-code to the alarm.
[CRAVEN]
It had a difficult past few weeks. To accept that her uncle had died was sealing the title of her best friend, her sister, being an orphan and Craven had lingered around as much as she could. She'd suggested they go out to lunch, to go pick up their animals, to even get Starbucks to postpone dropping Lakenna off. "We can always do everything but packing from my apartment. All you have to do is just say the word." She checked her rearview mirror and considered making a u-turn. She wouldn't be going back to work in the office until everything was sorted, she'd already spoken to her supervisor and due to the fact she'd gotten many pictures of Greenland, all he'd asked was for her to write an article when she was up to it. She'd made it clear that Laken was her priority and they'd agreed to let her work from home. Her audi rolled to a stop and she put it in park. A frown playing across her lips as she inwardly debated about continuing on. To leave Laken alone in this time just felt wrong, and who knew where the Shrew had gotten. "I can always stay, Lake." She offered.
Her heart felt heavy as she took off her seatbelt to twist, moving to watch the other and set her hand on her forearm. She felt like crying the second she took in her bloodshot eyes, the tear on her face. Where Laken looked a hot mess, Craven held herself together past her appearance - she'd dressed in a simple red jersey and a pair of blue jeans. That was always their relationship, wasn't it? Keeping the other afloat? From shattering? "Love you, too." Craven said the words softly. Cautiously. Any other day, she would have called out about slamming the door, but instead there was silence. She watched the other make her way to the front of the manor. She didn't turn off the car, or drive off just yet. She wouldn't until she made sure that Laken was alright, and had sent a text telling her to go home.
Her gaze drifted to the other's empty hands once she reached the door step and a frown played across her lips as she realized she'd forgotten her bag. Twisting in her seat, Craven found the bag sitting where she'd thrown it into the back before grabbing it and turning off her engine. The car would be fine, she told herself. With her keys and the bag in hand, she opened the car door and got out. "Lake," She called before heading up the pathway to her sister's side. Her heart broke all over again as she saw the tears and she set the bag down, "Let me," She said, reaching past the other girl as she slipped her arm around in a comforting manner. "I've got you."
[ADLEY REED]
This wasn’t Adley’s neighbourhood. His neighbourhood wasn’t too far away, but the differences weren’t subtle. Where in Adley’s neighbourhood, richness and poorness butted up together to create an amalgam of understanding and cultural acceptance, Elmworth was of a whole new league. He assumed that those who lived in these houses spat on the suburb next door, and thought even worse of the suburb beyond that. Westwall and Honeymead were Adley’s favoured stomping grounds, but to get better images and greater inspiration, sometimes his meandering footsteps took him even further.
The camera was always in his hand. These days he didn’t go looking for blood and gore to sell to the papers. These days he tried to take a more optimistic approach to life. He looked for beauty beneath the grime. He looked for beauty in the dirt. There was plenty of beauty on show in Elmworth, but it wasn’t at all natural. It was all manicured and man-made, and Adley wondered if there was anything worth his while, here.
He wandered, anyway. In a playground in mansioned suburbia he found a slippery slide with some graffiti painted down its side. At the edge of the park was a perfect picket fence and trees that had been groomed, local council no doubt responsible for the fairylights that were wrapped around the limbs month in, month out. It didn’t matter the season. Across the road was a lawn, perfectly cut, and a house that looked like a rich person’s Alcatraz. The house next door was similar. Adley found the right angle; the graffiti looked fresh. Had to have been, for it to still be there. He doubted those in this neighbourhood would stand to have the art remain longer than a day. It was too brash for their delicate sensitivities.
He wanted to capture the richness of the suburb beyond that single scrawled message in bold sprayed colours. It was a hint of the poor creeping in, a rebellious message to the elite. After capturing the image, Adley swung on the swings for a good ten minutes before leaping from them, crossing the road, and meandering further into the suburb. Watching, waiting for something interesting to capture.
[LAKENNA]
By the fifth attempt, her despair had been replaced with anger, and as her fingers curled into a fist, she let loose a quiet growl. How could she not enter a single ******* number? Slamming her hand against the door, she hit it once, twice – and when the third time came, she felt the warmth of Craven’s embrace. Her hand paused against the door, fingers played across the oak. “Thank you,” she breathed, though she didn’t bother to recite the number. There was no reason to. They were of one mind, one soul. Craven had lived in this house as long as she had, and as her fingers flew across the keys, she closed her eyes. “I don’t know how I can do this. I should never have come home. I’m not ready.”
When the light on the alarm switched from red to green, she pulled in a sharp breath, the scent of rotting leaves filling her senses. It was supposed to relax her, to calm her, but instead, she felt as if she were a second away from screaming at the sky. “Here goes nothing,” she whispered as she stepped in front of her sister, her palm pressing to the door to ease it open. One inch and she was tensing, two inches, and she was a second away from running, three inches – and something clicked. The sound was subtle, buried beneath the pounding of her heart, but she had caught it. Somehow, she had caught it – but only, it had been too late. She didn’t think to warn Craven, she didn’t have a chance to blink.
Click.
It happened far too quickly for her mind to process. One second, she had been contemplating giving everything over to the lawyers, and the next, she was thrown back. No, thrown was too kind of a word. She was literally blown away from the entrance, bundled in a blanket of fire. The heat was all consuming, and she couldn’t breathe. She couldn’t process anything. The roar of the fire drowned out the sound of her screams, and by the time her back crashed into the grass a few hundred yards away, she was unable to even remember her own name. Was she even awake? Was she dead? She didn’t know – how could she know, when all she saw was darkness? Open your eyes! She couldn’t. She couldn’t open her eyes, she couldn’t move, she couldn’t breathe. It felt as if a ton of bricks had been dropped onto her skull and placed within her chest. There was nothing but pain and heat.
Oh, god, so much heat.
She wasn’t sure she was even consciousness. It was as if she were outside of her body, watching the scene from afar. The mansion was engulfed in flames, the front entrance completely demolished. The stone pillars that had once decorated the entrance were gone, bits of rock flying through the air to crash into the surrounding grounds. Smoke blackened the skies, and had she been coherent, she wouldn’t have believed what she was witnessing. She wouldn’t have been able to. Even now, when she felt the darkness inching in on her mid, she knew there was something she needed to do, someone she needed to save, and yet, as her mansion disintegrated into a million pieces, she couldn’t think of what. It wasn’t until she felt something crash at her side, the scent of burnt flesh filling the air that she remembered. She hadn’t been alone. She was never alone. Craven! Yet, as soon as the thought entered her mind, the darkness won, and she found herself succumbing as her world descended into utter chaos.
[CRAVEN]
The code was second nature to her as she kept her arm around the other, her dark hair falling over her features as she punched it in. Giving Laken a gentle squeeze, she stepped back and sighed. "You had to come home. Let's just get you some clean clothes, okay? To hell with getting things done. We'll work on it tomorrow, together." She frowned as she let her arm fall. The bag felt heavy in her hand, but she'd dump it out on her sister's bed and just pack it without thought. Maybe she wouldn't even do that, she'd just grab another and fill it. Bring them both back out. She'd been trying to get Lakenna to move in with her for ages now, why hadn't she pushed further? The question hovered between her as she waited for the door to swing open. Lakenna was in front of her, and the next thing Craven knew, she felt invisible hands shoving at her chest, her sister's weight connecting with her body at the same time and there was heat. Her head connected first, a whisper escaping past her as her body followed hard. Blackness enveloped her vision as she felt the wind leave her lungs.
There was a faint tingling sensation that ran from her thigh to her hip, one that she didn't register to be pain as she coughed. She felt something stab her, the smell of smoke and burnt hair evident. At her side, she could smell burnt flesh, but she couldn't remember what she'd been doing. Who she'd been with. Her head felt heavy, a fuzziness dancing within her head as she tried to open her eyes, a flickering brightness forcing them closed. She gasped for air and coughed, the noise a wheeze. It didn't reach her ears, where a constant ringing mixed with the sound of flames grabbing at the air around them. "Laken." She thought, the ringing continuing.
She thought, the ringing continuing. She felt a pull of warmth at her side, twisting as she tried to move. The moment she moved the slighest inch, she cried out - a mix of a scream and a gasp. Her eyes opened briefly, her head lifting as she looked down. Patches of blood and dirt stained her clothes, some parts torn and burnt away to reveal raw skin underneath.
She couldn't bring herself to sit up as she dropped her head back against the dirt. "La." She croaked out, panic rising in her throat as she couldn't see where the other had fallen. Carefully, she turned her head. Searching. Blue eyes opened briefly as she could see the smoke lifting into the sky. "Lak-en." She whimpered when she found her sister. Her hand slowly reaching out towards the other, fingers trembling and caked with rust. Was her chest moving? Was she moving? "Help." The word was said softly in a whimper before she tried it again, louder that time. She could see a shard of glass in her forearm. What the hell had happened? Her fingertips brushed against the familiar cheek just as she shifted her leg and froze. It was as if a white hot iron had cut through her thigh, Craven fading back into the darkness, flitting between the two sensations. Fighting to stay awake, but finding it hurting too much to be able to as her hand fell back against the grass against a charred piece of wood.
[ADLEY REED]
The last thing that Adley expected in this glowing, perfect suburbia was the mushroomed bloom of fire and chaos. All he had to do was take another five steps and there… whoah. He was nowhere near and he still felt the wave of heat crash over him, tickling at his scalp and rippling through his clothes. “Oh, ****,” he murmured; he should have taken a few steps back, should have been shocked or scared, but he was in awe. It was absolutely magnificent! He brought the camera to his eye and took a few snaps, the fire lighting the neighbourhood like Christmas come early – though of course it wasn’t Christmas decorations on people’s doorsteps. Not yet. They had to get through Halloween first.
He hadn’t seen the women to begin with. Rather than call the fire brigade or the ambulance or the police, he moved forward. It was habit, wasn’t it? He’d done this kind of thing for a living. He’d stalked accidents and crime scenes, he’d gotten to them before the authorities to get the pictures he needed without being told to stay behind the line. The camera was held at the ready; this was perfect. This immaculate neighbourhood was on fire and it was absolutely… ******* awesome.
It was only when he was close enough to feel like he was about to step into the oven that he heard them. Gasps, whimpers. Help, one of them asked. Adley approached the lumps in the grass and … he stopped. He’d lifted his camera, ready to take photos of the charred flesh, the blood. Oh, the blood. Nostrils flared, eyes widened. But he didn’t lose control like he used to. No, it was vampire blood that unhinged him, now. Humans didn’t excite him like they once did. One was reaching for the other, and Adley circled around went to his knees at their heads.
“Ladies,” he said. “You look like you’re in a bit of a bind…” he murmured, though he wasn’t sure either could hear him. He wasn’t sure they were even fully alive. They might have been pretty. He couldn’t tell. Adley peered at them, curious. The camera settled against the small of his back, the strap across his chest. He leaned back, backside resting on his ankles as he looked up at the fire. It was an explosion. A bomb. Someone meant to blow up this house. Was it the house they’d wanted to destroy, or was it the women now passed out in the grass? Adley arched a brow.
He knew if he touched them he’d only leech the last of their life from them. He couldn’t do CPR, then. That was out of the question. But he could… well. He glanced over his shoulder; they wouldn’t be alone for long. But … maybe long enough. He pushed up the sleeves of his jacket and, canines sharp, he tore into the tender skin of one wrist, then the other. Blood bubbled to the surface and he smiled before shuffling forward. Two at once? Why the **** not.
He pressed the bleeding gashes to their lips, hoping that whatever consciousness was left would, even in their sleep, awaken to realise the potion upon their tongues would save them.
“I don’t think I’m ready to go home.”
It hadn’t been the first time she had made that statement, and still, it didn’t change anything. She knew, just as Craven did, that she didn’t have a choice. There were bills to pay, lawyers to speak to, boxes to be packed – and yet, as the car turned onto the quiet suburban street, she wanted to scream. Dropping her head back against the leather of the seat, she closed her eyes to block out the mansion as the car rolled closer, as if by just willing it away, it would disappear. “We can still turn around, right?”
Even as she spoke the words, she felt the car come to a stop, the sound of the shift switching into park sounding as if her sister had just signed her fate. Swallowing past the razorblades within her throat, she forced her eyes to open, the blue shimmering with tears as she finally drank in the only home she had ever known. The manor that had once been filled with life now stood ominous, the curtains drawn, and the doors barricaded closed. There had never been a day when there wasn’t some form of life bustling about the grounds; the gardener, the groundskeeper, or even the dogs. There had always been someone to greet them when they pulled into the drive, but just like the day her father had died, it seemed the life had been literally siphoned from the world. No joy, no light, no love.
There was nothing left but pure and utter desolation.
“He’s not there,” she whispered, though this time, it was clear she wasn’t speaking to anyone in particular. Releasing a quiet sigh, she forced her unsteady fingers to uncurl from the cracked plastic of her Starbuck’s cup, the frozen coffee all but forgotten as it melted. She hadn’t even bothered to take a sip, every time the straw had met her lips; it had only been chewed into pieces. Paying it no mind, she settled it in the cup holder as she searched for the handle. She hesitated for a second, a single tear escaping to trail down a puffy cheek. She knew she looked like complete ****. Her eyes were swollen and red, her lips torn from the hours she spent chewing them into oblivion, her hair an uncombed mess. Even the clothes she wore, a single white t-shirt and a pair of oversized sweatpants screamed her despair to the world. “I’ll see you later, okay? Love you,” she breathed as she finally opened the door.
The cool autumn air danced across her skin as she eased from the passenger seat, her body mimicking that of an elderly lady instead of a twenty-three year old girl. Slamming the door shut behind her, she tipped her head back to gaze at the silent manor, her tongue trailing over the edge of her teeth. She knew he would want her to go inside, pack his things, and go on with her life. It was what he had always told her, yet, she felt as if was a sinking ship. Try as she might, she couldn’t stay above the water, and she couldn’t will her feet to move. Behind her, she listened to the car idle, and she knew that she wasn’t alone. It was that thought that propelled her forward, her breath locked in her lungs. Each step had her trembling, her tears falling freely now. By the time she had reached the door, she had dissolved into a complete wreck, her fingers shaking as she tried over and over to key in her pass-code to the alarm.
[CRAVEN]
It had a difficult past few weeks. To accept that her uncle had died was sealing the title of her best friend, her sister, being an orphan and Craven had lingered around as much as she could. She'd suggested they go out to lunch, to go pick up their animals, to even get Starbucks to postpone dropping Lakenna off. "We can always do everything but packing from my apartment. All you have to do is just say the word." She checked her rearview mirror and considered making a u-turn. She wouldn't be going back to work in the office until everything was sorted, she'd already spoken to her supervisor and due to the fact she'd gotten many pictures of Greenland, all he'd asked was for her to write an article when she was up to it. She'd made it clear that Laken was her priority and they'd agreed to let her work from home. Her audi rolled to a stop and she put it in park. A frown playing across her lips as she inwardly debated about continuing on. To leave Laken alone in this time just felt wrong, and who knew where the Shrew had gotten. "I can always stay, Lake." She offered.
Her heart felt heavy as she took off her seatbelt to twist, moving to watch the other and set her hand on her forearm. She felt like crying the second she took in her bloodshot eyes, the tear on her face. Where Laken looked a hot mess, Craven held herself together past her appearance - she'd dressed in a simple red jersey and a pair of blue jeans. That was always their relationship, wasn't it? Keeping the other afloat? From shattering? "Love you, too." Craven said the words softly. Cautiously. Any other day, she would have called out about slamming the door, but instead there was silence. She watched the other make her way to the front of the manor. She didn't turn off the car, or drive off just yet. She wouldn't until she made sure that Laken was alright, and had sent a text telling her to go home.
Her gaze drifted to the other's empty hands once she reached the door step and a frown played across her lips as she realized she'd forgotten her bag. Twisting in her seat, Craven found the bag sitting where she'd thrown it into the back before grabbing it and turning off her engine. The car would be fine, she told herself. With her keys and the bag in hand, she opened the car door and got out. "Lake," She called before heading up the pathway to her sister's side. Her heart broke all over again as she saw the tears and she set the bag down, "Let me," She said, reaching past the other girl as she slipped her arm around in a comforting manner. "I've got you."
[ADLEY REED]
This wasn’t Adley’s neighbourhood. His neighbourhood wasn’t too far away, but the differences weren’t subtle. Where in Adley’s neighbourhood, richness and poorness butted up together to create an amalgam of understanding and cultural acceptance, Elmworth was of a whole new league. He assumed that those who lived in these houses spat on the suburb next door, and thought even worse of the suburb beyond that. Westwall and Honeymead were Adley’s favoured stomping grounds, but to get better images and greater inspiration, sometimes his meandering footsteps took him even further.
The camera was always in his hand. These days he didn’t go looking for blood and gore to sell to the papers. These days he tried to take a more optimistic approach to life. He looked for beauty beneath the grime. He looked for beauty in the dirt. There was plenty of beauty on show in Elmworth, but it wasn’t at all natural. It was all manicured and man-made, and Adley wondered if there was anything worth his while, here.
He wandered, anyway. In a playground in mansioned suburbia he found a slippery slide with some graffiti painted down its side. At the edge of the park was a perfect picket fence and trees that had been groomed, local council no doubt responsible for the fairylights that were wrapped around the limbs month in, month out. It didn’t matter the season. Across the road was a lawn, perfectly cut, and a house that looked like a rich person’s Alcatraz. The house next door was similar. Adley found the right angle; the graffiti looked fresh. Had to have been, for it to still be there. He doubted those in this neighbourhood would stand to have the art remain longer than a day. It was too brash for their delicate sensitivities.
He wanted to capture the richness of the suburb beyond that single scrawled message in bold sprayed colours. It was a hint of the poor creeping in, a rebellious message to the elite. After capturing the image, Adley swung on the swings for a good ten minutes before leaping from them, crossing the road, and meandering further into the suburb. Watching, waiting for something interesting to capture.
[LAKENNA]
By the fifth attempt, her despair had been replaced with anger, and as her fingers curled into a fist, she let loose a quiet growl. How could she not enter a single ******* number? Slamming her hand against the door, she hit it once, twice – and when the third time came, she felt the warmth of Craven’s embrace. Her hand paused against the door, fingers played across the oak. “Thank you,” she breathed, though she didn’t bother to recite the number. There was no reason to. They were of one mind, one soul. Craven had lived in this house as long as she had, and as her fingers flew across the keys, she closed her eyes. “I don’t know how I can do this. I should never have come home. I’m not ready.”
When the light on the alarm switched from red to green, she pulled in a sharp breath, the scent of rotting leaves filling her senses. It was supposed to relax her, to calm her, but instead, she felt as if she were a second away from screaming at the sky. “Here goes nothing,” she whispered as she stepped in front of her sister, her palm pressing to the door to ease it open. One inch and she was tensing, two inches, and she was a second away from running, three inches – and something clicked. The sound was subtle, buried beneath the pounding of her heart, but she had caught it. Somehow, she had caught it – but only, it had been too late. She didn’t think to warn Craven, she didn’t have a chance to blink.
Click.
It happened far too quickly for her mind to process. One second, she had been contemplating giving everything over to the lawyers, and the next, she was thrown back. No, thrown was too kind of a word. She was literally blown away from the entrance, bundled in a blanket of fire. The heat was all consuming, and she couldn’t breathe. She couldn’t process anything. The roar of the fire drowned out the sound of her screams, and by the time her back crashed into the grass a few hundred yards away, she was unable to even remember her own name. Was she even awake? Was she dead? She didn’t know – how could she know, when all she saw was darkness? Open your eyes! She couldn’t. She couldn’t open her eyes, she couldn’t move, she couldn’t breathe. It felt as if a ton of bricks had been dropped onto her skull and placed within her chest. There was nothing but pain and heat.
Oh, god, so much heat.
She wasn’t sure she was even consciousness. It was as if she were outside of her body, watching the scene from afar. The mansion was engulfed in flames, the front entrance completely demolished. The stone pillars that had once decorated the entrance were gone, bits of rock flying through the air to crash into the surrounding grounds. Smoke blackened the skies, and had she been coherent, she wouldn’t have believed what she was witnessing. She wouldn’t have been able to. Even now, when she felt the darkness inching in on her mid, she knew there was something she needed to do, someone she needed to save, and yet, as her mansion disintegrated into a million pieces, she couldn’t think of what. It wasn’t until she felt something crash at her side, the scent of burnt flesh filling the air that she remembered. She hadn’t been alone. She was never alone. Craven! Yet, as soon as the thought entered her mind, the darkness won, and she found herself succumbing as her world descended into utter chaos.
[CRAVEN]
The code was second nature to her as she kept her arm around the other, her dark hair falling over her features as she punched it in. Giving Laken a gentle squeeze, she stepped back and sighed. "You had to come home. Let's just get you some clean clothes, okay? To hell with getting things done. We'll work on it tomorrow, together." She frowned as she let her arm fall. The bag felt heavy in her hand, but she'd dump it out on her sister's bed and just pack it without thought. Maybe she wouldn't even do that, she'd just grab another and fill it. Bring them both back out. She'd been trying to get Lakenna to move in with her for ages now, why hadn't she pushed further? The question hovered between her as she waited for the door to swing open. Lakenna was in front of her, and the next thing Craven knew, she felt invisible hands shoving at her chest, her sister's weight connecting with her body at the same time and there was heat. Her head connected first, a whisper escaping past her as her body followed hard. Blackness enveloped her vision as she felt the wind leave her lungs.
There was a faint tingling sensation that ran from her thigh to her hip, one that she didn't register to be pain as she coughed. She felt something stab her, the smell of smoke and burnt hair evident. At her side, she could smell burnt flesh, but she couldn't remember what she'd been doing. Who she'd been with. Her head felt heavy, a fuzziness dancing within her head as she tried to open her eyes, a flickering brightness forcing them closed. She gasped for air and coughed, the noise a wheeze. It didn't reach her ears, where a constant ringing mixed with the sound of flames grabbing at the air around them. "Laken." She thought, the ringing continuing.
She thought, the ringing continuing. She felt a pull of warmth at her side, twisting as she tried to move. The moment she moved the slighest inch, she cried out - a mix of a scream and a gasp. Her eyes opened briefly, her head lifting as she looked down. Patches of blood and dirt stained her clothes, some parts torn and burnt away to reveal raw skin underneath.
She couldn't bring herself to sit up as she dropped her head back against the dirt. "La." She croaked out, panic rising in her throat as she couldn't see where the other had fallen. Carefully, she turned her head. Searching. Blue eyes opened briefly as she could see the smoke lifting into the sky. "Lak-en." She whimpered when she found her sister. Her hand slowly reaching out towards the other, fingers trembling and caked with rust. Was her chest moving? Was she moving? "Help." The word was said softly in a whimper before she tried it again, louder that time. She could see a shard of glass in her forearm. What the hell had happened? Her fingertips brushed against the familiar cheek just as she shifted her leg and froze. It was as if a white hot iron had cut through her thigh, Craven fading back into the darkness, flitting between the two sensations. Fighting to stay awake, but finding it hurting too much to be able to as her hand fell back against the grass against a charred piece of wood.
[ADLEY REED]
The last thing that Adley expected in this glowing, perfect suburbia was the mushroomed bloom of fire and chaos. All he had to do was take another five steps and there… whoah. He was nowhere near and he still felt the wave of heat crash over him, tickling at his scalp and rippling through his clothes. “Oh, ****,” he murmured; he should have taken a few steps back, should have been shocked or scared, but he was in awe. It was absolutely magnificent! He brought the camera to his eye and took a few snaps, the fire lighting the neighbourhood like Christmas come early – though of course it wasn’t Christmas decorations on people’s doorsteps. Not yet. They had to get through Halloween first.
He hadn’t seen the women to begin with. Rather than call the fire brigade or the ambulance or the police, he moved forward. It was habit, wasn’t it? He’d done this kind of thing for a living. He’d stalked accidents and crime scenes, he’d gotten to them before the authorities to get the pictures he needed without being told to stay behind the line. The camera was held at the ready; this was perfect. This immaculate neighbourhood was on fire and it was absolutely… ******* awesome.
It was only when he was close enough to feel like he was about to step into the oven that he heard them. Gasps, whimpers. Help, one of them asked. Adley approached the lumps in the grass and … he stopped. He’d lifted his camera, ready to take photos of the charred flesh, the blood. Oh, the blood. Nostrils flared, eyes widened. But he didn’t lose control like he used to. No, it was vampire blood that unhinged him, now. Humans didn’t excite him like they once did. One was reaching for the other, and Adley circled around went to his knees at their heads.
“Ladies,” he said. “You look like you’re in a bit of a bind…” he murmured, though he wasn’t sure either could hear him. He wasn’t sure they were even fully alive. They might have been pretty. He couldn’t tell. Adley peered at them, curious. The camera settled against the small of his back, the strap across his chest. He leaned back, backside resting on his ankles as he looked up at the fire. It was an explosion. A bomb. Someone meant to blow up this house. Was it the house they’d wanted to destroy, or was it the women now passed out in the grass? Adley arched a brow.
He knew if he touched them he’d only leech the last of their life from them. He couldn’t do CPR, then. That was out of the question. But he could… well. He glanced over his shoulder; they wouldn’t be alone for long. But … maybe long enough. He pushed up the sleeves of his jacket and, canines sharp, he tore into the tender skin of one wrist, then the other. Blood bubbled to the surface and he smiled before shuffling forward. Two at once? Why the **** not.
He pressed the bleeding gashes to their lips, hoping that whatever consciousness was left would, even in their sleep, awaken to realise the potion upon their tongues would save them.