R (
somethinghuman) wrote2018-05-09 08:12 pm
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He meant to hold out longer. He really did.
Back home, he could go weeks to months without feeding. The new hunger, no matter how strong, was easier ignored in a dead city. There may have been the occasional feral street dog or unfortunate pigeon to help sate it, but they were just a crutch. Something to help ease the churn and ache that came from something that knotted up in his throat and head and demanded he appease it.
Darrow wasn't a dead city.
There were living everywhere. Even alone on an empty street, he wasn't alone. Every building had humans behind its walls, the air itself was saturated with the smell of living pounding him between the eyes. It made the hunger rear and demand he do something. It made his teeth bare and clench.
He didn't want to hurt anyone. He'd promised. He'd promised himself and the people he'd met that he wouldn't.
But the new hunger demanded.
He was sitting at his open window when he smelled blood. Fresh, alive, cloyingly metallic. It made him dizzy, and even without making a decision for it, his feet turned to follow the smell out the door and out the building. It wasn't human, he knew that, but the smell of feral pain and fear was bright and hot, and he couldn't help it. It called him and he was so, so, hungry.
When he found it in the alley, he mostly just thought: That's really sad.
The cat had clearly been hit by a car. It's back leg was mangled, it's pelvis at an odd angle. There were drag marks on the ground from where it'd tried to take itself to safety.
It was in pain, and pitiful, and there was no way it would survive anyway.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry I can't help you. But I can make it stop.
He made it quick. He owed it that much for the pain it was in, and for what he was about to do.
It didn't taste right. Not the way the new hunger wanted. But with blood slick lips and a mouth full of flesh and fur, at least the smell of living was easier to ignore.
Back home, he could go weeks to months without feeding. The new hunger, no matter how strong, was easier ignored in a dead city. There may have been the occasional feral street dog or unfortunate pigeon to help sate it, but they were just a crutch. Something to help ease the churn and ache that came from something that knotted up in his throat and head and demanded he appease it.
Darrow wasn't a dead city.
There were living everywhere. Even alone on an empty street, he wasn't alone. Every building had humans behind its walls, the air itself was saturated with the smell of living pounding him between the eyes. It made the hunger rear and demand he do something. It made his teeth bare and clench.
He didn't want to hurt anyone. He'd promised. He'd promised himself and the people he'd met that he wouldn't.
But the new hunger demanded.
He was sitting at his open window when he smelled blood. Fresh, alive, cloyingly metallic. It made him dizzy, and even without making a decision for it, his feet turned to follow the smell out the door and out the building. It wasn't human, he knew that, but the smell of feral pain and fear was bright and hot, and he couldn't help it. It called him and he was so, so, hungry.
When he found it in the alley, he mostly just thought: That's really sad.
The cat had clearly been hit by a car. It's back leg was mangled, it's pelvis at an odd angle. There were drag marks on the ground from where it'd tried to take itself to safety.
It was in pain, and pitiful, and there was no way it would survive anyway.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry I can't help you. But I can make it stop.
He made it quick. He owed it that much for the pain it was in, and for what he was about to do.
It didn't taste right. Not the way the new hunger wanted. But with blood slick lips and a mouth full of flesh and fur, at least the smell of living was easier to ignore.
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"You... s-still... fell... in-in... love... anyway?" He asked, wondering if it had been mutual or disjointed. Had either of them ever felt like he did, holding Julie's hand, and wanting in a way he hadn't known was possible?
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Absently he touched his chest, where his shirt currently covered his new, inexplicable scars.
"There was a lot of verbal sniping at first. He'd ask if I enjoyed killing his countrymen, things like that. I flirted because it was fun to see him flustered. And, I realized, that he liked it."
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Nodding along, he tried to imagine it. It was difficult, he didn't know Dorian, but from the little he knew he could imagine Bull's easy smile fighting it out against someone's bluster. It made him smile. "L-like... for-forbidden... love. But... you... s-still... did it."
Smile fading to something a bit more wistful, he thought of Julie. He doubted she'd loved him, but he thought she felt something. Whether it had been fondness, or pity, or merely friendship he didn't know. But he was pretty sure what he felt for her might be love. He still did. She was out of sight, but not out of heart. "Girl... back... h-home." He confided. "L-living... girl."
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Fondness softened his features as he spoke; Dorian was unique in all the people that ended up in Bull's bed while he was in Thedas. Dorian came back. Dorian stayed.
He grinned when R confessed his own romance. "A living girl, huh? How'd you meet her?"
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Not exactly the usual way to meet girls, living or otherwise. Throw in the fact he'd saved her via technically kidnapping her and it really didn't paint the picture of romance. But he'd kept her safe. And when she was determined to leave, he'd gone with her instead of trying to force her to stay. That had to mean something, as weird as it probably looked.
Shrugging, he decided to avoid the topic of Perry and brains. "C-city," he said, remembering the way Julie had looked to him when he first saw her. Hair wild and too many shades of gold to count, a determined look on her face as she cocked a shotgun. I should have been scared she'd shoot me, but instead I still think that's the hottest thing I've ever seen. "Hunting... with... dead. S-saw... Julie... and wanted... h-her... safe. Kept... her... s-safe."
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He never had cause to protect Dorian from other Qunari, not until the whole business with the Viddasala... and in the end, well. He didn't want to think about that now.
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Sometimes miracles worked out, though. Like hiding a living girl in a crowd of dead, or magically appearing in a living city. Taking a stroll to the woods with a horned giant.
Shrugging, R minded his steps carefully. "Was... im-important," he said. "F-felt... something."
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They were downwind, which was good, and he could smell the deer. He pointed ahead, hoping R would see them as they edged closer.
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The deer didn't smell much better than the cat. Still wrong, not the right kind of living, but he could overlook that. The sickly dying smell wasn't sticking to them the way it had to his last meal, and he watched them from slightly behind Bull with wide unblinking eyes.
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Bull pulled a knife from his boot - it was long and designed to be thrown. He moved closer to the herd, scanning for any that might make a better target than the others. If worst came, he could track something that was bleeding.
He picked a likely target - closer to them than the others, somewhat smaller. He adjusted his hold on the knife, and in a smooth, quick motion, he threw it. It embedded in the young stag's neck.
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And oh. R smells blood, and raw animal fear, and the new hunger hits him between the eyes like a sucker punch.
After that it's a bit of blur. His lips peel back in a snarl, he's bending his knees, and really he has no idea where the speed comes from but one second he's behind Bull and the next he's throwing his full weight into the side of a terrified deer.
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He got closer; the animal was struggling, but it was also bleeding hard. Avoiding kicking hooves and short antlers, Bull leaned in to jerk his knife free, making the stag bleed faster. He watched R and stayed close to see if he needed help killing it.
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With a growl he managed to pin the animal, only taking one kick to the ribs that was still hard enough for something inside to make a dull cracking sound. After that, he found the tear in the stag's neck and bit down. This is insane. Totally insane, but I can't stop.
It might not taste right, but he was hungry enough that the new hunger didn't seem to mind. Maybe it was Bull's living smell so close, or just the blood in his mouth, but something unsettling was satisfied by ripping out the beast's throat with his teeth.
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He averted his gaze politely when it sounded like R had started eating, but he stayed protectively close. Geralt often patrolled these woods, and he didn't want the witcher thinking he'd found some mindless monster.
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The deer might be dead, but the whole body didn't know that yet. There were still little spasms in the muscles making them twitch, the blood was thick and bright with life, and the meat was dense and heavy on his tongue.
Not as good as human, but so much better than cat.
After taking the time to eat his fill, R finally set about ripping open the belly. His nails were short and broken, but sharp, and it took a few minutes, but he finally managed to dig through the skin and muscle into the body cavity. Digging around, he grunted when he yanked out the liver, slimy and gleaming in the low light.
Standing, he shuffled a few steps towards Bull and held it out. I hope he's not a vegetarian...
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Damn, he couldn't say no to that face.
He accepted the liver with a quiet laugh and, without any hesitation or qualms, Bull took a bite out of it. More chewy when it was raw, but it was not the first raw organ he'd ever eaten.
"Good job, kid," he said after he'd swallowed. "You done with it?" he asked as he gestured at the carcass.
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Whatever it was it was... weirdly nice. Like maybe they had something in common.
Nodding, he glanced back at the carcass. It would start to cool soon, and once it did, it was worthless to him. "Y-yeah... thank... you."
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"Hey, I heard a hoof or something connect with you - you okay?" he asked as he looked down at the shambling kid. Watching him move that quickly had been impressive. Maybe it was a weird hunting adaptation. Preserving energy until he needed it.
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Nodding, he clumsily felt along his rib cage. Nothing was jutting out at an odd angle, or caving in, but he was pretty sure he'd heard a dim crack when the hoof hit. "Does-doesn't... hurt," he shrugged. "Don't... f-feel... pain. It'll... g-go... away... if it... broke."
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"Here, this should be shallow enough to splash around in. Can't imagine you're much of a swimmer. No offense, kid."
Bull crouched by the edge of the water, to clean his hands and his face. It wouldn't do to return to Dorian covered in blood, since that would require a more detailed explanation of where he'd been.
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Shrugging, he considered the shallow stream before wading into it. The water wasn't very deep and the current rather gentle. He fell into an unsteady crouch where he tried to wash his hands and where blood had soaked into the fabric of his hoodie. Frowning, he looked down at himself. Blood spread from his face, throat, and down the tattered cotton of his shirt. That's not good.
Thinking, his shoulders slumped. Glancing to make sure Bull hadn't wandered off yet, he adjusted his stance and let himself splash down face first. Resigned to just let the water wash the majority of the mess away, he started counting down as he considered the rocky stream bed just below his nose. Like nature's washing machine.
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"I don't know if you can drown, but let's not tempt fate."
The light was almost gone, but Bull got a decent look at R. "Well, maybe if you zip up your hoodie, you'll be alright. Do you have other clothes?"
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Shaking his head, he fumbled for the zipper and wrestled it up. If there were blood stains still on his hoodie, they weren't immediately discernible while the fabric was wet. And if there were... well. He'd picked the right outfit the day he'd died. "It's... a... g-good... thing... I... w-wear... rr-red. Huh?"
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Still, he looked R over. He needed alternatives, especially if he had a habit of getting blood on his clothes. Bull made a mental note to start looking for clothes that might fit R. He was tall, for a human, and a little gangly. "Come on, kid. Do you wanna go back to your apartment? I'll walk you."
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"Sure," he said, taking a few heavy steps thanks to wet denim and cotton. On the upside, at least I don't need to worry about chafing. "D-don't... want... to... h-hold... you... up."
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