Heather finished the last of her coffee, swirled the cup around, and drank the sugar that had fallen to the bottom of the Styrofoam cup. Above her head, the cheap fluorescent lights buzzed away over the cafeteria of St. James City Hospital.
She crumpled her cup. Her break was almost over, and it was about time to start making her rounds again.
The man across from her, another nurse named Clarence, folded the newspaper he had been reading and slapped it down on the table. They were the only two in the cafeteria this late. It had just turned midnight.
"There was no blood found
again
," Clarence told her. "How the fuck does that
happen?
Someone kills these motherfuckers, drains the blood, and then takes the body and hangs it up from a tree, and no one
notices
any of this?"
"Right?" Heather responded, but she was tired of talking about it. The whole City had been talking about nothing else except these murders for weeks now.
And with good reason. Red Eyes, the newspapers were calling the killer. But that was just a guess. No one had ever seen the killer, or had any idea why he was killing the people that he was.
Criminals, all of them- pimps, muggers, rapists, mobsters. All the dead that Red Eyes had killed had that in common.
That, and they all were found ripped apart and hanging from something, trees, light poles, a flag pole, once.
It was fucking terrifying, if you thought about it.
Heather didn't want to think about it.
She had her rounds to make, she had four more hours to go before her shift ended. She had a lot of people who
weren't
dead yet to think about.
"Have a good night," she told Clarence. He just grunted, went back to his paper.
Heather smoothed out her scrubs and went back to work.
******************************
At about five in the morning or so, Heather got off her bus in front of a pharmacy. She had been having trouble sleeping, working the night shifts was her latest idea to get some sleep. It hadn't been working. She had been making a strong drink of vodka, and she still might, but she wanted something else that might help her sleep.
She didn't notice the man that got off behind her.
Heather walked around the pharmacy a little bit, buying some light groceries, finally making her way to the pharmacist. A few minutes later, he had filled her prescription for Dormien, which she thought might let her sleep, and possibly not let her dream.
That was the hope.
Heather turned around, exhausted, and not paying attention. She turned around, reading to see if alcohol was contraindicated with Dormien, and collided with the woman in line behind her.
"Oh my God," Heather said. "Sorry!"
But Heather had hurt the woman, even though she hadn't walked into her very hard. The woman was bent over in pain. Heather could see that the woman had her ribs taped up, bulky even under the woman's loose sweater.
"Are you OK?" Heather asked her, and the woman looked up, her pale blue eyes framed by long black hair. The woman coughed, but managed a weak smile.
"Yeah," the black haired woman said. "I'm OK. I've been through worse."
"I guess so," Heather said. She pointed to the woman's bandaged ribs. "Just bruised, I hope?"
"No, cracked," the woman said. "It hurts a lot. Mainly only if I breathe, or walk, or sit, though. So there's that."
Heather smiled, but she could see the effort that even such a small joke had cost the dark haired woman.
"Hey," Heather said. "You rest up. Sorry again."
Heather walked out of the pharmacy into the cold pre-dawn of early morning in the City.
She started walking down the sidewalk to her apartment, tired, looking forward to nothing more than some kind of sleep. The late night shifts hadn't made her tired enough to sleep, the vodka hadn't worked. Maybe this drug would work.
Heather needed sleep, more than anything. Sleep had been hiding from her since...
She was so tired that she didn't notice the man from the bus behind her, had no idea he was there until he rushed up and wrapped his arm around her throat. Heather tried to scream, but he had his forearm strongly against her windpipe.
She dropped her groceries, and grabbed the man's arm with her hands. She was no stranger to the City, and she knew that she had to fight, she had to claw, she had to bite. She was readying herself to sink her teeth into his arm and rip his flesh out with her teeth.
But then he held the knife in front of her face. A long blade, curved cruelly, designed for nothing more than opening up another human being. It shone in the cold light of the streetlight.
Heather froze from fear, looking at that weapon.
The man whispered in her ear.
"That's right," he said, waving the knife back and forth in front of her face. "You just come with me, over there, and I won't have to open you up all over this sidewalk. You get me? Open you
up.
You just come with Little Sammy and let Little Sammy have his way with you and you won't get cut. You might even like it."
Heather nodded, tears running coolly down her face as she watched the knife shine, struggling to breathe. Here it is, she thought. The City finally got me. After all this time, it's finally got me.
But all of a sudden, the hand holding the knife was pulled away from her. She could hear the man behind her grunt in pain.
"Hey, asshole," Heather heard someone say behind her. The man holding Heather shoved her down to the sidewalk, and spun around to face the intruder. Heather looked behind her, over her shoulder.
It was the woman from the pharmacy. She stood a few feet from the man from the bus, one hand of hers beckoning to him.
Come to me.
Little Sammy leered at her, small, and hurt. He smiled... she's hurt, he thought. She'll be even easier. He held his blade up in front of his face, and showed it to her.
Open you up.
The man from the bus took a couple of steps towards the woman from the pharmacy. Heather got to her feet, and fumbled for her phone from her purse. She flipped it open, and started to make a call to 911.
But Heather didn't need to. The man took another step towards the woman from the pharmacy, and then the black haired woman spun around, and with an indescribably fast motion, kicked the man from the bus on the side of his head. He stumbled once, twice, finally losing consciousness, his head clanging into the cold metal of a trash can as he fell.
He laid there motionless next to his terrible knife on the cold sidewalk, blood trickling from his mouth. A small crowd was gathering, call the police, someone was saying. Anyone have a cell phone?
"Holy shit," Heather said under her breath, getting back to her feet.
The woman from the pharmacy bent over and vomited on the sidewalk.