Gold Tooth and C.J. stopped what they were doing and focused
on the slender hooded figure standing there. More amused
than anything else, C.J.laughed. "You betta sit your ass back
down little boy, or you gonna get exactly what she's getting."
And they laughed again. Nelson called, "Come on back here
son, there's nothing you can do."
The boy walked over to him and pushed back the black hood.
Thick auburn dreadlocks shedding coppery highlights framed
the pale opalescent face. The hair cascaded over his shoulders
falling almost to his chest. And a slow smile, at once eerie
and angelic, dimpled the youngster's waxen cheeks.
Nelson gasped in surprise, "Ronnie! Oh god, I knew you looked
familiar!" he automatically moved forward a step, but then
his quick smile faded and he backed away, confused...and
afraid, "But how...?"
Nelson was chilled to the bone. He stared at the youngster,
heart thudding. He had known Ronnie, his neighbor, for all
the thirteen years of his life; had babysat him, taken him
on vacation with his own son Michael who was his best friend
and six months ago he had been at the cemetary to weep when
they lowered the boy into the ground. Yes, Ronnie was dead
--was supposed to be six feet under.
They heard the woman whimpering, and Ronnie, narrowed green
eyes burning with an unearthly fire, brought a long-nailed
finger up to his lips. Then he pointed at the armed "boombox"
youth who stood, staring back at him, mouth agape in bemused
wonder. He'd completely forgotten about holding his gun on
Nelson. Seizing the opportunity, the big man moved swiftly
sideways, crushing the funman against the wall with his big
body. A small dull snap, like a dry twig breaking, and the
guy fell to the floor hissing, a deflated, limp balloon.
They gun spun away from his hand. Recklessly, Eric dived
for it under the seats, he grabbed the handle with bothe
hands and rolled over onto his back, only to find himself
straddled across the hips by Ronnie. Snarling, the boy,
savagely slapped the gun out of Eric's trembling fingers and
ground his hips down on him. Ronnie then leaned forward
until he was practically lying on the teenager, savoring
the throbbing excitement of the human heart pressed against
his own silent chest. He let his long hair fall around Eric's
head, until all that the frightened teen could see was the
young vampire's terrifying face radiating its infernal
beauty, its eyes blazing just an inch away from his own.
"I know what you like..." whispered Ronnie and flicked his
tongue across the warm, mortal mouth. Then he giggled, for
even as the panicked young man frantically raised his hips
and bucked trying to throw him off, he was sensing desire
at the center of Eric's fear. Wearying of the game, Ronnie
knocked him unconscious with what seemed litle more than a
tap.
At that moment, the train vibrated back to life. Jolted by
the sudden movement, and confused by the baffling activity
at the other end of the car, C.J. and Gold Tooth both froze
in position. C.J. still held the squirming woman tightly
around the neck, Gold Tooth had ripped away her undergarments.
His pants were down as he knelt on the seat between her legs.
Ronnie made a small animal sound, and his hair whipped to a
blur as he whirled and leapt into the air He landed half
way across the car, feathersoft, and silent, behind the
startled C.J.. Wrapping a slender arm, strong as steel cable
around the man's neck, Ronnie pressed his cold face tightly
against the cheek that radiated mortal heat. He could hear
sweet life-blood pulsing, pulsing, within the body. He
closed his eyes and shuddered ecasticlaly. Veins swelled,
Throbbing at his tremples and forhead, Ronnie's face seemed
distorted, almost fluid, as his lips stretched wide to let
the translucent curved incisor slide into place. C.J.'s
strangled scream into the night was lost in the noise of
rushing engines. And his consciousness drained away with
his hot blood into the relentless, fish-cold mouth upon
his neck.
Scared, almost out of her mind, the woman had slipped onto
the floor. She crawled on hands and knees, scrambling
over the unconscious body of teh executive, and rushed to
Nelson who held her, shushing her, calming her down while
deliberately not looking to where the screams and sucking
sounds were coming from.
Gold Tooth stayed as he was, petrified, locked in the same
position, unbelieving, mesmerized. He stayed even when
Ronnie, in a quick motion, twisted C.J.'s neck. A snap,
and the head faced backwards. The boy simply dropped the
heavy carcass onto the floor like a plaything he'd grown tired
of . Gold Tooth's joints unlocked only when Ronnie began
advancing on him, slowly, smiling sweetly, his coral mouth
rosy as if painted with lipstick.
"No...no..this can't be happenin', this ain't no fuckin'
movie..it can't.."
Forgetting that his pants were down to his ankles, Gold Tooth
tried to run, but he tripped and crashed onto his bare
behind. He didn't even try to stop and pull up his baggy
jeans, but attempted to push backward, away from the creature's
inexorable approach.
Peals of Ronnie's childish laughter suddenly filled the air.
"Na na Na na na, look-what-I-can-see," he sang, the boy laughed
again and pointed to Gold Tooth's croth, Gold Tooth looked
down at himself. "Oh shit!" In all the excitement, somehow
he'd remained sexually rampant. Overwhelming fear did not
allow embarrasment, but he tried urgently to wriggle his
pants up his legs. Ronnie moved swiftly. Gold Tooth felt
like he had been punched hard in the stomach, but in a blink
the kid was standing in front of him again.
Bowling Green next stop, intoned the garbled voice from the
speaker. Nobody paid attention. The old man still slept.
The boy vampire, with a cute tilt of his head, now looked
like lmost any normal kid, and stood there watching
intently as Gold Tooth pulled up his wet pants. Wet pants?
Gold Tooth looked down puzzled and uncomfortable. Dull
realization sank in as he looked at the bloody empty space
between his legs and then at the pitiful thing the boy
held up then dropped into his lap.
At the Bowling Green stop, Ronnie lifted the unconscious
executive easily, like a child in his strong arms, while
Nelson and the woman stumbled off the train and onto the
platform of the empty station.
As they stood there, they heard the old bum on the train
finally wake irritated, from his dep, drunken sleep, "What
you hollering for," he asked Gold Tooth, "what the hell is
goin' on here?" The doors slid shut, cutting off Gold
Tooth's hoarse screams. The train sped away.
The bright orange--colored station with its shiny walls
lent an edge of reality to their situation; here they could
almost pretend things were normal--except for the vampire
among them.
While they dialed the emergency number for the badly injured
executive, Nelson and the woman, her blouse pinned together
agreed on what to say. They'd keep it simple: They found this
man beaten up and robbed on the train and they called for help.
No more, no less. The guy certainly couldn't tell them
any different. And anything else they said would be unbelievable.
Ronnie, satiated with blood and filled with its warmth, tried
to reduce their natural human fear and aversion, by cloaking
his preternatural nature in normalcy, but was not altogether
successful. The woman, dazzled yet repelled by his
strangeness, his unearthly beauty, thanked the boy with a
trembling voice, but kept her distance.
In one wild subway ride everything Nelson believed in, everything
that formed the foundation of his understanding of good and
evil, real and unreal, had been turned upside down. Now any
incredible thing was possible.
When they found Ronnie he was almost gone from loss of blood,
his jugular ripped open, they assumed by some animal.
Everyone thought it might have been Pedro, Manuel Acevedo's pet pit bull.
Manuel claimed it couldn't have been Pedro, that he was too tame, and
anyway, the dog and Ronnie had played together for years.
But in the end, neighborhood pressure forced them to destroy
the docile pooch that everybody once loved. Well, thought
Nelson, I guess it really wan't Pedro.
The boy stood looking at him with such open innocence.
Nelson was confused. Geez, weren't vampires evil? Weren't
they at least supposed to look evil? But tonight, it--Ronnie,
saved us; there was alot of blood, still, he looks a lot
more like an angel than a demon. Ronnie came up close to him
and Nelson stepped back slightly, almost oeverwhelmed by
the contained power, the ethereal glamour that enveloped the
boy. With a characteristic tilt of his head and the reddish
locks tumbling about him, Ronnie asked in his familiar
smoky voice, "How is Mikey, I really miss him, I want to see
him." Lost for a moment in the see-green of the boy's
beguiling eyes, Nelson mumbled "O.K." the, "Uh, wait a minute
..." He tried to visualize telling his fourteen year old son
that his best friend is now a vampire and wants see him.
Michael and Ronald had been inseperable. Michael was very
young when his monther died, so Ronnie's death had really been
the first he ever had to deal with and it devastated him.
His son hadn't been quite the same since.
"Oh, thank you, thank you...don't worry, I won't frighten him,
we understand each other perfectly, you'll see," He smiled,
dazzlingly. Thank god, no fangs, thought Nelson. He signed,
then realized...damn, I just did what all the movies said
you shouldn't do. I just invited a vampire into my home!
For a second, an image of his apartment festooned with
crosses and garlic came to mind, but Nelson vigorously
shook the vision from his head.
Another train pulled loudly into the station just as the
medics came through the gate with a strethcer and walked
toward them.
Nelson looked around to suggest that Ronnie leave, but the
little vampire was already gone.