The Renfield Syndrome (Non-erotic bisexual horror) - David is an ordinary man thrown into a nightmarish world of bloodlust and passion with his own humanity at stake. This is an ongoing work in progress of psychosexual horror.
https://www.literotica.com/stories/memberpage.php?uid=7267751&page=submissions
CONTENT WARNING: Bloody horror violence and gore, strong sexual content
CHAPTER 5
"Holy shit, what happened to this guy?"
"Attacked a cop, I can't believe he's alive with all the holes in him. Cop must have been a real bad shot, I guess he missed everything important. Reports of extremely violent behavior, so let's leave him strapped down just in case. Vitals?"
"Blood pressure elevated, one thirty-five over ninety. Temperature one-oh-three, he's burning up. Heart is palpitating, it's way too fast. Pulse 140 bpm."
"Whatever he's on, it's a lot stronger than the vodka in his pocket. Get him on saline and let's run drug, alcohol, and toxicology, figure out what we're dealing with. He's amped to the gills on something. Any ID on him?"
"No wallet or ID, he's a John Doe. Put him in 4-B while we wait for the drug screen. He's out like a light, he's not going anywhere."
Except David wasn't out like a light, not anymore. His mind had snapped awake when they loaded him on the stretcher, but rather than alert anyone to his consciousness, it seemed wiser to lie still and play dead. He was
supposed
to be dead, after all, he'd been
pumped fulla lead
as they used to say in the old spaghetti westerns. He could even feel the bullets lodged in his body, two in his right shoulder and three in his chest, one in the region of his heart. Objectively, he was in agony, but the pain seemed unimportant, like something that might be happening to a different person even, and it was easily ignored.
David stayed still and kept his eyes closed, feigning unconsciousness all through the ambulance ride, and used the time to try to reason out what had just happened to him. His memories of the evening were crystal clear and sharp in spite of the fog of alcohol in his head, but he couldn't comprehend his own actions. At the time, taking a big ol' bite out of poor, pretty Eric had seemed like the most natural thing in the world, his only regret was that he hadn't had time to savor it. David couldn't explain to himself why he had done it, except that almost supernatural hunger had simply gotten too great to deny any longer. It had been worse than any alcohol craving, any drug withdrawal. He could still feel it, coiling inside of him like a living thing, sated for now but still restless, filling his mind with violent fantasies of what he
should
have done to the cop who shot him. But these thoughts were alien to David's mind, the thoughts of someone he didn't know and couldn't recognize. He wanted to deny thinking them, just as he wanted to deny his own actions, and found he could do neither.
What in the name of God was happening to him? It was too much to write off as a bad binge. His body felt out of control and his mind felt like a caged animal, and he no longer trusted either one. Who knew what was real or not anymore? So much had happened that seemed impossible, so many things he himself had done that were beyond the realm of possibility as he understood it. Not the least of which was that David couldn't remember ever winning a fight in his entire life, and yet he'd made mincemeat out of a guy twice his size armed with a baseball bat and didn't crack a sweat doing it. That was as incomprehensible to David as the fact he'd attacked the guy in the first place. Again, at the time it had seemed like the right thing to do and he hadn't questioned it.
And now he was in the emergency room of the hospital. He stayed quiet and still throughout getting his wounds triaged and dressed, through several pricks of the needle as they took blood and injected him with something. Then the general din of the ER receded somewhat as they stuffed him somewhere out of the way after ensuring he was still safely strapped to the gurney.
When his other senses told him he was alone, David cracked an eye and took stock of his surroundings. He was in a curtained off exam room surrounded by the tools of the emergency medical trade, including a heart monitor that was beeping at a worrying pace. David went to feel his own chest and discovered that he was bound ankle and wrist by canvas straps holding him down. He tested them, found them quite secure, and gave this a moment's contemplation. Then David began to strain against the bond on his right wrist. The muscles in his arm bunched as he gradually and steadily increased the force, until he was pulling against the strap with all his might. He pulled and pulled with sweat popping on his forehead until suddenly with a heavy tearing sound he ripped the restraint free from its mooring.
Breathing hard from the exertion, David quickly unbuckled his left hand and then his ankles, then pulled the large I.V. needle from his arm, but hesitated at the heart monitor. Leaving it in place for the moment, David looked down at the bloody gauze that had been applied to his chest and shoulders and wondered that he was still alive, let alone peppy enough to break a canvas restraint. On an impulse he pulled the trauma bandage beneath his left pectoral away so he could inspect the wound beneath, and his mad suspicion was confirmed. David was no doctor, but he knew a fresh wound from one that had been healing for a while, and he guessed this one to be a week old at the very least. It was as if the natural healing processes of his body had gotten set on overdrive, his wounds scabbing and scarring over at ten times their normal pace.
David had no time to contemplate this miracle however and found himself locked in a fierce argument with himself about what he should do now. The part of him that wasn't taking all this weirdness with so much chill said that there was something very very
wrong
with him. Whatever was supposed to happen, none of this was it. And it further reminded him that he was in the place where you were
supposed
to go when something was wrong. The common sense, civilized thing to do was stay right here and let himself be examined and hopefully cured.
David's newly awakened animal brain did not like this idea one bit. He didn't like hospitals to begin with, he associated them with pain and illness, filled with the stench of antiseptic and death. If he were to stay here, he would be trapped, no way they would let him go after his adventures tonight. There were at least three assault charges against him that he would have to explain as well as his inhuman healing factor. If he told them the truth about anything, they'd throw him straight into the crazy house. David wasn't at all sure they wouldn't just for the hell of it, it was probably where he belonged anyway.
It was this last thought that made his mind up. David pulled the heart monitor from his chest and the rapid beeping that sounded like he had a hummingbird in his chest turned into a long steady tone. Knowing it would be seconds before someone was summoned to check on him, he peeked through the curtains surrounding his exam room, and then slipped out into the hallway. He cast his eyes about and spotted a glowing red exit sign, and made a beeline for it, walking as fast as he dared through the busy E.R. without attracting attention.
He was almost to the automatic doors leading to the waiting room and freedom when a matronly looking nurse holding a clipboard stepped out into the hallway directly in his path. He tried to dodge around her, but she caught sight of the bloody bandages covering him and the restraint still attached to his wrist and immediately registered something was
very