I haven't been frightened of anything in the last 372 years. I can still remember the last time it happened; I'd been foolish, allowed myself to get caught up in the affairs of mortals and wound up on the wrong side of a civil war. I spent the day they beheaded King Charles hiding in a beer barrel in a tavern run by Royalists, gripped by a desperate thirst and convinced that my benefactors would betray me to the Roundheads before night could fall. I was wrong, but only by a matter of minutes--the setting sun stung like a swarm of wasps as I burst from the rooftop of the burning building and fled to the docks. I spent the next six weeks clinging to the underside of a sailing ship bound for the West Indies, only emerging to slake my thirst on the last night with port already in sight. I strode onto shore in Barbados with the blood of a dozen men flowing through my veins and never looked back.
I thought I'd forgotten what terror felt like. I thought I'd left it in England along with the last shreds of my mortality, conquered it on that blood-soaked night when I took my revenge for my humiliations on a crew of sailors who no doubt had no idea I was there and took no interest in politics. I believed I was strong and brutal and decadent, easily besting the disorganized oppositions of would-be van Helsings and taking whatever I wanted, whenever I wanted, wherever I wanted in this new world. I lost the memory of my guts turning to water and the panic nearly stirring my dead heart to race with fear. I believed myself to be an immortal, unchallenged king of pain--the breeder of horror, not its recipient.
It's funny what comes back to you.
Her body is waifish, so light that I could no doubt wrap a single hand around her pale pink neck and lift her clean off the ground... but the strength in her blazing eyes pins me to the spot. I can't reach out for her, I can't run, I can't even so much as raise a hand to block the blow as she slaps me hard across the face. "You fool!" she hisses, anger turning her voice into an inhuman growl two full octaves below what she sounded like back at the bar. "You useless, pointless, bloodreeked walking corpse of a fool! Oh, I'll see you suffer for this. I'll make you wish you'd fucking stayed in the unhallowed ground where they buried you, just you watch."
Her eyes didn't look like this when I was watching her back at the bar. Her big coke-bottle lenses magnified the soft, doe-like hazel gaze of adoration she turned on her boyfriend, the big strong man who bought her one drink after another until she was almost too tipsy to walk. I was distracted, I admit--I was already thinking about how good her blood would taste seasoned by alcohol, and making my plans to lure them into the alley with my hypnotic powers--but I'm certain I would have noticed a pair of vertical pupils set into viridian sclera that glowed with actinic hate. I'm observant like that.
"Do you know who he was? Do you have even the slightest comprehension of the work you just ruined?" she snarls, gesturing to the body of the athletic young white man that lies crumpled on the ground between us. He's already growing cool, his blood congealing on the concrete surface of the alleyway between the bar and a tattoo parlor that exists in a symbiotic relationship with it; I didn't bother draining more than a couple of gulps before I let him crumple to the pavement with a pair of razored gashes in his throat. At the time, I thought of him as nothing more than an appetizer, a tough and stringy hors d'oeuvre before my delectably tender main course. Of course I didn't know who he was. Do you know which cow provided your steak at dinner?