I originally wrote and posted this story, known as
Stalked,
to Lit on 11/16/17,
under the name KindofHere, and I posted it again (I believe) as MrHereWriting in 2020 (maybe). Now I'm posting it again.
I do not give anyone permission to re-post or archive my stories. If you want to download my story for personal use, be my guest, but that's as far as my permissions go.
Otherwise, have fun and enjoy.
1
Marcus Wolfe
"I am Marcus Wolfe."
The reflection in the mirror was not his own. His mind saw a different creature, a thing he didn't recognize. It was him, but it wasn't him. The face staring back was sharper, wilder--animal.
He folded his straight razor, never having brought it to his skin, setting it down on a white cloth. He ignored the ever-present five o'clock shadow tinting his lean jaw. He never let it grow into a full beard, and his dark whiskers remained a constant reminder of what lurked beneath his skin.
"I am Marcus Wolfe."
His green eyes caught the light, and he watched their glow brighten within the mirror.
"Telling yourself who you are won't stop what's coming," his grandfather had told him long ago.
"You shouldn't have bitten me."
"The beast bit you. Embrace the gift he's given you."
"Will it hurt?"
"It doesn't matter. The man never remembers."
"The beast better remember," Marcus told his reflection.
He entered his shower, turning the knobs until the water created a billowing cloud of steam. He soaped his sun-gold skin, running his hands through his fine black hairs to touch the only scars marring his lean body--puncture scars whose wounds ran deep.
He left his shower once clean, drying himself as he entered his bedroom. He looked through his windows that overlooked Industry Park, a vast expanse of wilderness cut with manmade pathways, streams, and a large lake, but thankfully, no zoo.
"Sometimes the beast needs to hunt," he said. They weren't his words, but he repeated them often to remind himself of why he let it happen.
The sun had begun its descent over the western horizon. His skin prickled with the coming of the night and the rising of the moon. The moon promised him power, but he could never remember the true strength of that power the following morning. Some gifts lingered, making him more than a man but less than the beast.
He took a deep breath, smelling everything in his room and filtering out all but the scents of lavender, vanilla, hints of lilac, cloves, and other botanicals of a particular choice. Hidden among them was the faintest scent of something unique to the world. The aroma was pure. Marcus embraced it, allowing it to roll through him like a mist made of warmth, love, and eternity.
A pink card lay on his bed. He picked it up, holding it under his nose as he breathed in the perfume. He let the fragrance linger in his nostrils while his chest rose and fell in time with his deep breaths.
The moon was growing closer to him. He had to hurry. He put the card down next to the duffle bag he had packed earlier. He would have preferred to stay indoors during the night, hooked up to an IV drip with enough carfentanil to kill an elephant but only enough to place him in a stupor. Two days before the full moon and two days after, he would sleep through the change, but on the fullest of the moons, he allowed the beast to hunt because it needed to.
Marcus changed into some throwaway clothes he had bought at a second-hand store. The pants, the shirt, and the long coat were a few sizes too large, purposefully bought that way to accommodate his size after the change. His shoes were his own. He'd take them off and throw them into the duffle bag before it was time. The last part of his ensemble was a black baseball cap he would never see again.
He picked up the pink card and the duffle bag; then, he left his room and exited his high-rise apartment. Every so often, he'd lift the card to his nose for a long whiff of its perfume. As always, when he left his home for his once-a-month hunt, he took one last look at his door before forcing himself to continue into the night.
2
Redonna Washington
"I'm running late," Red said. Her fingers spun, their motions a blur as she turned the dial to her combination lock to the right, then left, then right again. "Late-late-late."
"Why the hurry?"
Red answered Sandra's question with a shrug and a smile before running to the showers with her body wash in hand. She didn't have time to go home, but she always planned for that contingency. A doctor's life was one of hurrying up to wait, which threw off her schedule more often than not.
She showered quickly, cursing her need to work out instead of going straight home. She lathered her smooth, brown skin, using her hands to push the soap over her toned curves, wiping away sweat and the grime of her hospital's cold corridors. She finished showering and raced back to her locker, her small feet slapping against the white-tiled flooring.
"So, what's that hurry?" Sandra asked again.
Red tapped her left ring finger with her right forefinger.
"Oh, the fiancΓ©e," Sandra said. "The mystery man nobody gets to meet."
"That's him."
"Does he exist, or is he a book, a cat, and a bottle of wine?" Sandra laughed.
Red pulled her full lips into an amused crescent that showed off the perfect white pearls of his teeth. "He's real; you know that. We're going out tonight."
"Mm-hmm," Sandra said. "What is he? A bookish professor? Everyone is betting he's boring and twice your age. I think he's an old lawyer with a big dick."
"Hey, I have a wild side," Red said as she glared at her gym bag. "I can't leave this at the gym. Can you take it for me and drop it off at the hospital tomorrow? I'll pick it up on Monday."
Sandra's eyes did a clockwise roll before she said in an overacted, sullen voice, "I guess--since I'm not lucky enough to get the weekends off. Is your man tall, dark, and handsome at least? Is he the sexy kind of mysterious?"
"Yes."
Red opened her bag and slipped on the clothes she had brought from home. It was a simple combination of clothing, nothing someone would wear on a
hot
date. She had a white, buttoned-up top, a fifties style pleated red skirt that fastened around her waist, frilly ankle socks, tennis shoes, and a red hoodie.
"Dressing a little down, aren't you?" Sandra asked. "Where'd you get those clothes: the salvation army?"
"He's bringing my clothes." A little blush that didn't color her brown cheeks too much crept across her face.