While the wolf gathered her strength, Murphy toed at the body beneath her before crouching, deft fingers sifting through pockets. Searching for what, she wasn’t really sure. Maybe the fleur de lis? It wasn’t likely. The human went down too quickly for them to be a trained Knight. Maybe a contract killer? Or someone just excited for a hunt so close after a full moon.
“I sure did,” Murphy said, mimicking the older woman’s accent before flashing her another wide smile, all sharp teeth. Not finding anything of note in the corpse at her feet, she sifted through the contents of his wallet before tossing it off to the side, aways away. Credit cards. Picture of his family. Punch cards to places Murphy didn’t know or care about. All useless. Not even any cash on him.“Maybe I’m your guardian angel. Who knows? Might be a superhero, too.”
The blood in her belly, staining her chin and neck, reinvigorated her. Murphy’s shoulders felt lighter, skin less prickly, less on edge. She craved more, eager to move on to the next one. Impulse drove her forward, back to her feet, but control told her to take a minute. Assess the damage. The wolf was still bleeding, she didn’t have to look to know that, and from what she could smell, it was pretty heavy.
“How long is it gonna take for that to heal?” She asked, stepping closer, risking claws to the neck to get a better look. The wolfsbane in her wound reeked, and Murphy grimaced. “Normally I’d go for a full frontal, but a wound like that wont do. It’ll just slow us down. Flank or retreat, your choice. I’d hazard a guess and say you know these woods better than I do.”
Dianna glared softly, slightly annoyed by the theatrics but wasn’t in a position to scold or roll her eyes. Seemed to be a common thing for vampires-- the longer they were around, the more playful they were about death. This one seemed a little too charmingly smug. Nick would like this one, she thought. “Superhero or guardian angel, I don’t give a shit, but I sure owe you one,” she responded gruffly.
She clicked her tongue at the question, her hand pressing hard against the wound to apply pressure. She’d have to find a witch or risk the Muttropawlitan to get a doctor to let her in through the back door for some uninsured aide. The venom of the wolfsbane spread like a fire in her veins and Dianna focused on her hearing-- scent was shot due to her wound. Footsteps and voices were about a half mile away. Whatever the choice was, they had to make it fast.
“It won’t until I drain the wolfsbane out,” she said, gritting her teeth and looking over her shoulder in the direction of the voices. “But we have visitors,” she said, looking to the trees. Her mind tracked out the woods, they were a quarter-mile from the Falls. Hunters strayed from there given it was a hotspot for sirens and harpies, whose songs would hypnotize them into a guaranteed death. It was worth the risk to shake the hunters, if they were at all familiar with the territory. Dianna nodded her head in that direction.
“The Falls are over there. A harpy can heal me,” she said, thinking aloud. Harpies had special healing powers and an alliance with one of the senior most members of the wolf pack was her leverage to talk one into helping her out. “And the hunters stay away from there,” she said, nodding back to the brunette. That was her signal, underscored by a man’s voice echoing through the woods.
Dianna sprinted through the trees towards the direction of the Falls, lagging slightly due to her injury but still fast than the incoming hunters.