As Salam Alaikum, dear reader. Salwa Alzahrani here. I am a gal with a few things to share with you. In the movies and books, the Vampire Hunter is always a heroic guy, and he comes in and saves the day. Think of Van Helsing and his acolytes tracking down and eventually confronting and destroying Count Dracula.
Well, in real life, it doesn't really work out that way. Real-like vampires are like people everywhere, some are good, and others are bad, and most fall somewhere in between. Does that surprise you? It really shouldn't. Everything under the sun exists because The Most High wills it, and like you, I have choices to make and I am trying my best in these trying times.
Take me for example. I was born in the City of Dammam, Saudi Arabia, in 1977 and in 1997, while visiting relatives in the City of Toronto, Ontario, I was forcibly transformed into one of the undead by an ancient vampire known as Al-Sharif. The old one was losing his marbles, and not even the extreme longevity of the Undead could keep him from hurling himself through death's door, so he saw fit to curse me. What a guy, eh?
All things considered, I've done fairly well for myself since I joined the ranks of the Blood Drinkers. The City of Toronto is my home now. I honestly haven't left Canada since I became what I am. Traveling while Undead is not the easiest thing in the world. There are a lot of myths and stories about vampires, most of which are untrue but one thing they get right is the fact that we burn in the sunlight. Kind of sucks if you ask me.
Adaptation is what all living things, from people to animals and plants, must do in order to survive. Mother nature doesn't tolerate the weak. She is a cruel mistress, kind of like me. I'm five-foot-four, slim, with dark bronze skin, long curly black hair and almond-shaped brown eyes. The Arab pixie, that's what some of my mortal friends call me. I might look cute, and soft and sweet, but I am a predator.
"Sister, do you know where Bloor Street is?" said a deep masculine voice, startling me out of my train of thoughts. I was sitting in a quiet corner of the train, another anonymous commuter in Toronto. The train was packed, and for the most part, people mind their own business while using public transit. In other words, strangers don't talk to you.
"New in town?" I replied, looking up at the tall, broad-shouldered and dark-skinned young African who was looking at me intensely. Both from his accent and style of dress, I could tell that I was looking at a relative newcomer. Clad in a Macawi robe and Kufi hat, this brother, who looked decidedly Somali, cut an imposing figure.
"You're almost there," I replied, when the tall Somali brother stared at me blankly. Definite newcomer who hasn't mastered the art of Canadian small talk, I thought. I remember what it was like for me during my first days in Toronto, more than a decade ago. Canada's largest metropolitan area is a far cry from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, where I first saw the light of day. Can you say culture shock? I've adapted nicely since then, or so I'd like to think.
"Thank you sister, I am new in town, and my sister Khadija works at an office there," the tall brother said, and I smiled at him with all the kindness I could muster. He returned my smile, and looked at me a bit longer than considered socially acceptable. I felt alarmed, but not for the reason you think. I am a vampire, and certain humans can sense that I am different. I've got to be careful, you see.
"Sister, are you Saudi? I went to Makkah for Hajj last year, I'm Bilal Warsame," the Somali brother said, with a youthful exuberance that I found almost charming. Unexpectedly, nostalgia shot through me. As I said before, I haven't left Canada since I became a vampire. Traveling is hell when you're what I've become. I miss Saudi Arabia, and my family there, but I can never go back.
"Indeed I am, brother Bilal, my name is Salwa," I replied with a curt nod, and Bilal smiled and nodded respectfully. Like a truly religious brother, Bilal did not try to shake my hand, nor did I offer him mine to shake. I might have been in Toronto for over a decade but my Islamic upbringing is hard to let go of, even though I no longer go about in Hijab or traditional clothing.
As a vampire, I've got to blend in, it's essential for my survival. Besides, I look pretty good in a T-shirt and blue jeans. The City of Toronto is one of the most racially diverse places on the planet, with a lot of Asians, Africans, Arabs, Latinos and Indians among the 'traditional' hordes of white Canadians. People of color are now the majority in the Greater Toronto Area.
"Have yourself a wonderful day, brother Bilal, Bloor is just a few stops from here," I said to Bilal as I exited the train at the next stop. Downtown Toronto beckoned, and I for one was hungry. I walked around for a while, and it wasn't long before I found what I needed.
Sitting at a street corner was a bum, and I lured him into an alley. I sank my fangs into his neck, and drank my fill. No, I didn't drink enough to kill the poor bastard or turn him. I just left him unconscious, and stuffed fifty bucks into his pocket. I walked away, waited five minutes and then called for an ambulance to pick up my latest victim.
Typically, I don't do this, I prefer to receive blood from blood banks, but there's something about hot living blood from a living human being which no vampire can resist. I don't kill my victims, I simply take enough for me to get by. What I got from the bum will last me for three days. I'm not greedy. Just a regular gal trying to survive, albeit one with fangs.
"Someone's careless," said a feminine voice, startling me out of my reverie. I tend to feel a little woozy after drinking blood because, well, it packs a serious kick. For a vampire, human blood is food plus an energy drink, and it's easy to get addicted. Of course, we can survive on animal blood and some of us can stick to that. I can't.
"Hello Kari," I said with a sigh, and turned around to see my least favorite person in the world looking at me. Standing five-foot-ten, with blonde hair and green eyes, Kari Von Friedberg is a vampire whom I met in my early days in Toronto. I can't stand the bitch. I should mention that she's been around for at least a century, and doesn't think much of fledgling vampires like myself.