The Vampire's Apprentice

"Except that this is not a splinter in your skin, it is an arrow in your flesh," Clancy said seriously. "I understand what you mean. You think that I do not, and I am not surprised in that, and I understand the desire to ignore something terrible in your past until it is forgotten, but it does not work that way. You may feel you have forgotten it, then one day it shall rise like a wraith and steal the breath from your lungs at a thousand times more powerful than it was at the first. That is why I am pushing and poking. Not because I do not understand, but because I do, at least well enough to know the consequences. The sooner you deal with this, the sooner you can truly move on with a cleaned wound that is healing into a scar and not a dirty wound still filled with the poison of the thing that caused it."
 
She sighed. How many times had they had this discussion before? How many times? And what was the outcome each and every one of those times? Nothing but disagreements and irritation. This was no acceptation.

"You know how poison works, don't you?" She asked. "Snake poison, specifically. Two things the victim should not do is, one, try to suck out the venom, since it spreads too quickly to make much of a difference, and two, do anything that accelerates the heart's rate of speed. You are doing both of these things. I have not said I don't need help; I'm asking you to stop trying to help me. It's agitating and stressful, making things worse before they have a chance to get better. Besides that, how do you expect to help a person who does not want it? I want to be left alone and let it brew for as long and painfully as it has to before I am ready to accept help of my own accord."

Her voice dropped to a cracked half-whisper, but she didn't look away. "That's all I'm asking. All I've ever been asking. I don't want to keep driving a wedge between us every time this issue is renewed."
 
Clancy's hand snaked out before his mind what it was doing. It caught Kitty across the cheek in a stinging slap that raised a red mark briefly that soon faded. The vampire stood with a spine of iron, his eyes like flint. "Go to your room, then, and let the poison rot you away," he whispered. "Go. I shall not watch you die."
 
Her fingers reached to cup her cheek, caught by painful surprise. Without a word of rebuttal, she stood and brushed past him, disappearing upstairs in an instant. The door was heard to click shut softly, weather Sam was already in the room or not. Kitty buried herself deep beneath the heavy covers on her bed, curling around a pillow and making no sound besides the occasional, shuddering breath as she cried.
 
Clancy stood frozen for a long time. Pain. He felt pain. He couldn't be here any longer or he might break something, and he hated replacing what he broke. It felt so irresponsible. Quietly, in complete control, he walked upstairs and watered his plant, moving it's position to a more optimal spot, then returned downstairs. He hat went on his head, and he walked out, locking the door behind him as usual. Then he turned and ran.

The world blurred around him, and the wind whipped his red hair straight back. It was going to be a tangled mess when he returned. He kept one hand planted on his hat and ran as fast and hard as his legs could take him straight out into the wilderness. Running away from the pain in his chest that might have once been his heart. Running from anger. Running from grief. Running from fear.

Not even a vampire can run forever, and he stopped, at last, in the middle of some brushy area in the middle of nowhere spotted by scraggly trees. The skeletons of buildings stood as reminders that once upon a time, humans dominated this land, but no more. They were gone. All that they'd brought with them was slowly fallen into decay. Clancy might have read more into the analogy, but he was more concerned with not tripping as he paced and metaphorically caught his breath.

He could not run forever. Should not run forever. Even if he currently wanted to snap her neck, Kitty was his, like a child or a surprise pet. He could not get rid of her on a whim anymore than he could have taken her in on a whim. He had gone too far with the slap, and yet he could not find it within himself to feel fully guilty. She was so stubborn and hot headed and full of her own half-baked knowledge!

Much like he had been at her age. Although, at her age he had been toting a gun in the mafia and had already shot three men. None of them had died, but that was not the point. Even so, he had still been much like her.

He sighed and took off his hat, running a hand through his hair. She was wrong, so very, very wrong, but she still, annoyingly, had one point in her favor: one could not force help onto someone else. They could do such things as take away the weapons to keep them from hurting themselves or others, but they could not force another to accept the fact that they were in need of help or wrong in any way. You could only present the facts and hope.

The stars glided across the sky. He needed to start back to get home before the sun rose and have time to write some kind of apology. He could not stop trying to help altogether, but he would stop pushing. He would insist she continue to see the therapist, but he would no longer try to bully her into realizing she needed something. He would bite his tongue and hope that therapist could work miracles while he just kept sharp objects away from Kitty for a while.

He was beginning to remember why it was he had avoided humans and any kind of friendship for so many years.

Clancy settled his hat back on his head and turned to go. A breeze wafted a faint scent to his nostrils, and he froze. If his heart still worked, it would have sped up to drum in his ears. He should not have come here. He spun just in time to react.


Clancy did not return by sunrise. There was no note waiting for Kitty. No sign of his presence. Granted, this was not a surprising thing as he rarely left much sign of his presence when he was home, but nothing had been put away on his desk, something he always did before retiring. He never had the chance.

~~~

Sam whined at Kitty's door, desperately needing out in the yard. He scratched agitatedly and whined again.
 
Groggily, Kitty drug herself out of bed, auto-piloting her way downstairs to let Sam outside. Glancing towards the table out of habit, she was equally surprised and confused not to see a note, but it soon dawned on her that it was Sunday. Today she had no chores, so after church she spent her time inside and reading the daylight away with a handful of fresh cookies nestled beside her. She even decided to give Sam one, being in an interesting mood that afternoon.

Though Kitty had noted the strange untidiness of his desk, the first thing to tip her off that something was amiss was the fact that Clancy had not been present when she returned home from another silent therapy session. She then checked to see if his hat was gone—which it was—so she assumed he was out someplace and likely would return later.

Faint worry tugged at the back of her mind, but she recalled the last time he had avoided her for a night—back when the house was on lockdown—and figured it was a similar set of events. The sting of the slap and the sharp coldness of his gaze, though faded in her mind, remained vivid in her emotions.

The girl fell out of bed again. She lay gasping the cool night air for a moment before quickly pulling herself onto the mattress and back under the covers. Kitty waited for a while until she calmed once more, listening to the still sounds of the night in the meantime. The silence reminded her of Clancy.

Sitting up, she looked towards the bedroom door, knowing it was late enough in the night that he should have returned. The girl was about to pull herself out of bed to check, but she stopped, frozen. The door was still cracked. It was never open after she fell asleep, which meant he hadn't been by her room yet.

Slightly more worried, Kitty glanced to Sam and pulled her bare feet softly onto the floor. She crept silently down to the living room and checked the clock, which read 3:41. Surely he would have come home by then.

"No note, but it was Sunday," Kitty whispered to herself, finding her voice in the flashlight-lit darkness to be eerie. "Desk was unorganized. Did I see his hat earlier in the day? He wasn't present this evening, and he hasn't been by recently."

She decided to give him one last chance and went back upstairs to sleep. There wasn't much she could do in the darkness anyways, but if he was to return home tonight, there would be a note on the table come morning.

He had to be alright....

He had to.
 
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There was no note. No indication of any change. No Clancy.

It was sometime around nine in the morning when the doorbell rang. Norville stood on the porch with the twins.
 
There was an awkward moment of shuffling before the door opened, and Kitty brushed her hair behind her ears. "Hm? Oh, hello. What brings you out here? I was just about to– Nevermind. What's up?"
 
"Hey," Norville said with a smile. "The twins here have been begging to play with your dog. Is this a good time?" He studied her, his smile fading. "Uh... maybe not? What's wrong?"
 
"I might be gone for a couple of days, so unfortunately this would be a bad time." Kitty tried a little harder not to appear as flustered. "Sorry about that, but if- when I return, I'm sure Sam would enjoy the company."
 
Norville frowned. "You're leaving? Why?"
"Where you goin'?" JP demanded, frowning. He'd had his heart set on playing with Sam!
 
"I can't say." She answered both of them. "Just that I'm gonna be gone for a bit— hey, twins, did you happen to see which direction Mr. McCleary went in a couple nights ago?"
 
The twins looked up at her, confused. "He didn't leave," JC said. "He stood out on the porch for a second."
"But then he went back in," finished JP.
That's what they assumed. In truth, he'd just vanished, but people didn't just vanish. They stepped back into houses when those watching weren't looking.
"Go home, guys, I'll be right there," Norville said, ushering them off the porch. He faced Kitty. "You sure you're alright? You don't seem alright."
 
She waited until the twins were out of earshot, then jabbed a finger in Norville's direction, followed by a thumb over her shoulder. "You, inside; now. I'll explain in a second." Kitty disappeared back into the house, leaving the door open for him.
 
"Uh... okay," Norville said in shock. He glanced over to make certain his little brother and sister were well on their way to his house before cautiously following her inside. "What's up?"
 
She closed the door softly, then turned to face him. Kitty exhaled briefly before she spoke. "Two things. One, I'm not crazy. I'm insane, but completely serious. Two, if you tell anyone else what I am about to tell you, I will die. If you don't feel like you're able to keep that kind of a secret, I have cookies and you can head back next door."
 
"Uh..." Norville leaned back against the door, his mind clearly overheating as he tried to take in the sudden intensity he was faced with. After a moment, a thought bubbled up, and he seized it. "I thought it was supposed to be not insane, but I am crazy?" he mumbled uncertainly. But he wasn't leaving not yet. Although he did dimly hoped the cookies would remain involved somehow.
 
Alright, maybe this had been starting to get to her, just a little; now she'd gone and unintentionally broken someone. Kitty brought the cookies out from the fridge while Norville was putting his head together, taking and offering one of the sweet objects to him.
 
Norville took the cookie and managed a smile. "Okay," he said slowly, "I can keep your secret. As long as your secret isn't something like how you're going to go on a killing spree. Is that good?"
 
She nodded. "I don't plan to kill anyone."

The girl sat down in one of the dinning-room chairs, gesturing he might as well do the same.

"First things first." Kitty began. "Mr. McCleary went missing two nights ago and has not returned home. It is my obligation to go looking for him."
 
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