"There aren't a lot of Vampires out there, simply because this world cannot support too many of us, it's a simple matter of, well, Vampire mathematics," Rufus Brown said to his friend, Karl O'Malley. Seated inside the Taco Zulu bar and grill in the City of Durban, South Africa, the two men bantered amid the clientele made up largely of hipsters, college students of all hues, and the wannabe cool types. Ignoring the noise, the two men focused on each other.
The two companions were as dissimilar as can be, indeed, they were about as similar as night and day. Rufus, the one who spoke was tall, dark-skinned, strongly built and well-dressed. The other, Karl O'Malley was short, about five-foot-eight, slender, pale-skinned and silver-haired, with frosty blue eyes hidden behind horn-rimmed glasses. The two had known each other for decades.
Rufus Brown is a Vampire, and Karl belongs to a secret organization known as the Crimson Order, formed many centuries ago and dedicated to fighting the supernatural. The Crimson Order has affiliates in America, England, South Africa, Italy, China, Japan, Germany, Nigeria, Cuba, Zimbabwe, Australia and more. Wherever the supernatural exist in large numbers, the Crimson Order sends men like Karl O'Malley to eradicate them. These two should have been mortal enemies, and initially, that's what they were.
Rufus and Karl hunted each other all over the Caribbean island of Cuba, once upon a time, and were forced to team up against a threat posed by an otherworldly entity. An ancient evil which roamed the world long before humans or Vampires existed. This experience forced Rufus Brown and Karl O'Malley to see each other in a whole new light. Since then, they've become allies of convenience.
"The average Vampire needs to drink six liters of human blood per week to function, that's one human slain every week, and fifty two dead people per year, if the Vampire in question is conscientious in his or her feeding habits," Karl O'Malley replied, his Belfast accent adding a pleasant lilt to his words, though his tone was harsh. The old man leaned back on his chair, and took a good look at his 'frenemy', the Vampire he'd been dealing with for more than three decades.
Rufus Brown looked pretty much the same way he had when Karl O'Malley met him on the streets of Havana, Cuba, in the summer of 1988. Six feet two inches tall, with mahogany-hued skin, and a smooth shaved head. Clad in a light gray business suit, blue silk shirt, black tie, and light gray silk dress pants, and those black Timberland boots he seemed addicted to, Rufus Brown cut quite an impressive figure. Dapper, smooth, and when the occasion called for it, very dangerous indeed.
"That's five hundred and twenty dead humans per year if there are ten Vampires in any one locale, and fifty two hundred dead humans if there are a hundred Vampires, now you understand why the Old Ones never allowed too many of our species to be made," Rufus said flatly, and Karl nodded and shrugged, biting his lip impatiently. Where in hell are you going with this? Karl wondered.
Ignoring Karl's gesture of annoyance mixed with impatience, Rufus took a sip of Blarney Red, nodded appreciatively and fixed his gaze on Karl. When the old man remained silent, the Vampire pursed his lips and tapped the bottle impatiently with his index finger. Irish wines are simply to die for, Rufus thought appreciatively as he gave the bottle a good shake before refilling his cup.
Rufus Brown had been fond of wines ever since he was mortal. He was born in Ohio, circa 1897, and had been everything from a farmhand to a day laborer along the railroad tracks and a hotel valet. One night, in the summer of 1929, he met a lovely woman named Hafiza Elmi, a newcomer to America by way of Somalia, in the Horn of Africa. It was an encounter Rufus would never forget, for Hafiza was the one who turned him into a Vampire.
"Alright, Rufus, why did you bring me here?" Karl asked impatiently, and the old man made a point of checking his watch. Rufus leaned back in his chair, stretched a bit, and grinned. When he did, he made a show of flashing his pearly white fangs, of which he had a mouthful of. In spite of himself, Karl shuddered, and Rufus laughed out loud like the bastard that he is.
"Well, I enjoy messing with you, cause it does bring the red to your aging cheeks, and oh yeah, that bitch Hafiza is in town and she's the one making all those new Vampires and I was hoping you could kill her so I don't have to," Rufus replied. With that, the Vampire whistled casually, smiling pleasantly at Karl as though the two of them were discussing sports or the weather.
"You son of a bitch, I am not going to do your dirty work," Karl O'Malley said angrily, and he slammed his fist on the table and rose to his feet. Rufus laughed, and then took a look around the bar, where several patrons gawked at their table, where Karl was causing a scene. A young Zulu guy, his Indian girlfriend and their Chinese buddy sat at a table just three meters away, and looked at Rufus with concern.
"Relax, folks, my friend is alright, he just had a bit too much to drink," Rufus said as he winked at the other patrons, and then gently laid his hand on Karl's arm. It seemed like a simple, even gentle gesture, yet with a Vampire's superhuman strength behind his touch, Rufus was dangerously close to shattering Karl O'Malley's aging bones to bits. The old man looked at the Vampire, scowled angrily, and then sat back down.
"If I'm not mistaken, Hafiza is your maker, which makes her your responsibility," Karl said, and Rufus frowned. He'd known Karl for ages, and they'd cooperated on many gigs, but the old man never ceased to be annoying. Rufus had grown to like Karl, even if the old guy couldn't always put aside his mortal feelings and see the big picture. You'd think being part of the Crimson Order would have given him a bigger perspective, Rufus thought, annoyed.
"Karl, I really thought you and your Crimson buddies could step in and clean the mess, but it looks like I'm going to have to do it myself," Rufus said, and the Vampire rose abruptly and then looked at the old man. Shaking his head, Rufus grabbed his black Fedora hat, which he'd been sporting for ages, and put it on before exiting the premises. He settled his bill, and Karl's, with the wait staff, and then ventured out into the South African night.