~~Eric~~
Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck.
He clutched the small woman against his body, tight enough so he could keep running, but there was no hiding that she was bleeding on him. Her blood was soaking through his suit and onto his skin. Each labored breath he took filled his lungs with the smell of it; and the smell was so damn famliar. Blood, life, from this dying creature in his arms.
He shook his head. What the fuck, get a grip.
"Just... find me a place... really... really dark. Completely... dark."
"You have a bullet in your fucking stomach, Fiona!" He winced as another bullet snapped nearby, crashing into his shadow as he rounded another corner. Those psychos were a ways behind him, slowed down by that weird web thing the girl had made, but they were going to catch up.
"Darkness... all... I'll need..."
"Darkness? Like, a shadow."
"Darker... complete... darkness."
"You need a hospital you fuckβ"
"Darkness!" She grabbed his suit jacket, and managed to shake it a couple times as she raised her eyes to glare at him. Christ she was pale.
"Alright, alright! Fucking darkness, alright." He looked around as he ran. Easier to ignore the grinding pain in his knee this way at least, panicking about the bleeding-to-death girl in his arms and trying to find some place where he could get the sort of darkness she was looking for.
It was night time, and he was on the edge of North Side and South Side. Only a mile from the neighborhoods, and he could run that. It'd destroy his knee, but he could run it. The girl was insistent though, very insistent on the darkness crap, and after seeing her defeat four psychos using some very weird shit, he really should just do what the girl said. If girl was even the right word to describe her.
Was she a monster? Or a regular every day Spider-Man? Far as Eric knew, Spider-Man didn't stab people with giant black blades. And that was a comic-book character. This girl had done insane fucking shit right in front of him, summoned something large, with eight legs that doubled as blades, and she'd attacked with them. Shadows that vanished after she used them.
She'd told him to not say anything, as if this was something she'd anticipated. God damn it, the fuck sort of ridiculous shit did he get caught up in?
Her blood was dripping down into his clothes. The feel of its warmth on one of his legs cracked across his brain like a whip. Find darkness, get to some fucking darkness.
A nearby building, some old, decrepit multi-floor building that was abandoned, waiting to be renovated and fixed. The door wasn't locked; most of the super old shit wasn't, worthless as the property was. He leaned down to open it, one arm hooked behind Fiona's shoulders, the other under her legs. With a little maneuvering, the two of them slipped into the darkness of the old building that was bound to fall on their heads at any moment.
He was panting, gasping, and every word stung his lungs. "You'd think... with how much money is rolling around South Side... they'd have enough money to fix... all these abandoned buildings... North Side."
"Old... town." She was gasping too, coughing, choking, but no blood came out of her mouth. Not lung shot, but the bullet had definitely ruined her side, her waist, and he was afraid to look down and see. She could start vomiting blood any minute. Just keep moving, keep moving.
No wonder the place was abandoned. The brick walls were filled with half-broken slabs, bits of ceiling had fallen apart and rained wood chunks over the equally destroyed floor, and old lighting fixtures hung empty. So dark, so very dark, dark enough he had to squint to see the silhouettes of the walls, and that was with his better eyes.
"D... Darker."
"Darker, right, darker. You know you're going to bleed to death? And I'm going to go to prison for it. You think a black guy won't get pinned with first degree murder, getting caught with a dead white girl in his arms?"
She laughed, then let out a quiet, low whine as the pain ravaged her, left her shivering and curling up against him. Don't make jokes, bad time for jokes.
The building looked like it must have been used as a private office building, probably for lawyers or accountants or something, with a secretary behind the large desk he found in what looked like something between a living room and a lobby. Falling apart benches lined the walls to his left and right. The drapes were rotting, and horrible.
"B-Basement... hurry... I have to see her."
See her? Basement? Cold started to work up his toes and into his legs, until his heart sped up for more reasons than adrenaline. He gulped as he looked down at the bleeding woman, the bleeding monster in his arms, and winced as he noticed her getting paler again. She was already pale, redhead and freckles and all, but his eyes could make out the white showing through as the blood drained out of her.
Second time he'd ever met this girl, and she was going to bleed to death in his arms. Fuck. Fuck fuck fuck.
Breathe, just breathe. Remember the shit in your dreams. Breathe.
He started wandering around, feet tripping over random bits of rubble. No time no time, go faster, find something. There were hallways lined with doors, and he peeked into them as he went past them as fast he could, but a basement wouldn't be connected by a door in the hallway. Think. End of the hallway? No, a lot of these old buildings put a basement door near the bathroom.
Bingo. He pulled the door open, and gulped again.
Blackness.
When he was a kid, he'd visit his uncle and aunt's place. A nice home, pretty big, fancy, old. It had a basement, deep and large, with stonework straight out of the medieval ages, exposed pipes and wall studs that still hadn't been covered in drywall. It was a great place to goof around with sticks or a soccer ball, but the light switch was on the wrong end of the large room, far away from the staircase that lead back upstairs. Come nightfall, turning off the light meant navigating the large basement in pitch black to reach the stairs.
He was always sure, each night that it had happened, that a monster was going to get him. It never happened, but he could still remember how fast it got his heart beating, navigating the blackness to find the old wooden stairs. Stairs just like the ones he was looking at. Blackness, just like the blackness in front of him.