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The Duality of Flesh

[ - Warning: Warning: The Duality of Flesh contains violence, blood and gore, body horror, dark themes, and mature content. Be warned: these pages may leave the lights on and your heart pounding late into the night.-] In the gaslight-infused sprawl of Sprocketville, Victor stirs cocktails and dreams of a life beyond the grime of his saloon. But fate throws a wrench (or perhaps a vial of glowing serum) into his ordinary existence. A chance encounter with a hauntingly beautiful stranger leaves Victor grappling with a terrifying truth: he's become infected, a monstrous fusion of man and vampire. Torn between his fading humanity and the bloodlust that courses through his veins, Victor embarks on a desperate struggle for control. Haunted by cryptic warnings from a forbidden book - "The Duality of Flesh" - he races against time to unlock the secrets of his transformation. As the line between monster and man blurs, Victor must confront a horrifying truth: can he survive the thirst... or will Sprocketville become his hunting ground?

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1 Chs

Gaslight Report

In the gaslit gloom of Sprocketville's most notorious establishment, the Cog and Whistle Saloon, shadows flickered on polished wood as dusk settled in. The air was thick with the scents of steam, aged wood, and hushed secrets. Gears hummed softly in the background, a mechanical rhythm beneath the clinking of glasses and low conversations. 

Across a table of burnished brass sat Thomas, his sharp green eyes transfixed by the newfangled television's flickering images. Smoke curled around him like the tentacles of some eldritch creature, lending an air of otherworldly mystery to his lean frame. 

"Victor," Thomas called, his voice just above the saloon's hum. "Take a look at this strange report." 

Behind the bar, Victor's amber eyes lifted, his distinctive wavy mullet silhouetted against the lambent glow of oil lamps. His gloved hands paused in their meticulous polishing a crystal tumbler suspended as if in divination. 

The television's tinny spoke in a scratchy voice, like an old record player: "Citizens of Sprocketville are perishing under mysterious circumstances. Witnesses speak of pale specters haunting moonlit streets..." 

A heavy silence fell over the dimly lit saloon, broken only by the announcer's disembodied voice. 

Victor, ever the picture of stoicism, sat down his glass and turned towards his companion. "That's an odd phrase," he remarked. "Specters? What exactly are we dealing with here?" 

Thomas's brow furrowed deeply. "They call it 'the Ghost of Sprocketville.' I overheard the newsboy shouting about it earlier." 

Victor stroked his chin thoughtfully. "Hmm. Sounds ominous. Could it just be the locals getting spooked by their own shadows? You know how these small towns are with rumors." 

Thomas nodded earnestly. "I'm not so sure, Victor. There's more to this than meeting the eye. This feels different, like there's something real behind it." 

Victor's eyes narrowed, concern furrowing his brow. What dark force had claimed four innocent lives? These were no random occurrences, but calculated strikes against those who dared venture into the unknown. Some deaths bore the hallmarks of nature's cruel hand, while others hinted at forces beyond mortal comprehension. 

His eyes drifted to the small, wooden-framed window where the scent of impending rain mingled with the distant taste of metal in the air. How did these people stand living with such uncertainty? No wonder they were all so paranoid! 

The television's glow drew his attention once more, displaying the visage of a victim—a young woman discovered by the railway station. Her simple white dress bore crimson stains, yet she held her head high, angelic features haunted and pale skin ghastly beneath the eerie glow of gaslight. 

"This can't be real!" Thomas exclaimed; his voice full of disbelief. "How many more have to die before we face what's really going on?" 

Victor sighed deeply. What do we know? Ghost stories have been around forever, but is there any real proof?" 

Frustration creased Victor's brow as the television's flickering images seemed to mock his attempts at rationality. He found himself torn between the logical mind that had served him well and the growing unease gnawing at his very soul. 

"Ghosts? Bloodthirsty creatures? Striga?" barely louder than the whooshing steam vents. "Such tales seem better suited to selling newspapers than elucidating truth." 

Yet, as he gazed at the haunted expressions of the deceased, Victor's thoughts gripped as he pondered the recent events. His mind drifted to a visit to Sprocketville's antiquarian bookshop, where he had chanced upon a curious tome. 

"The Duality of Flesh," by one Amelia Blackthorn, he recalled. The volume had detailed the harrowing journey of a protagonist caught between two worlds—human and monster. Victor had dismissed it as fanciful fiction at the time, but now... 

"Could there be a connection?" he mused, his voice a hushed whisper. The parallels between the book's conflict and the current situation in Sprocketville were too striking to ignore. 

Thomas carelessly stubbed out his cigarette on the polished brass tabletop. 

"Thomas!" Victor chided, annoyed. "How many times must I remind you not to damage the furniture with your smoking?" 

Thomas flashed a sheepish grin. "You could have... you know, simply made a polite request." 

Victor sighed, reaching beneath the bar to produce a small bottle. "Consider this a token of my appreciation for your future consideration," he said, a hint of wry humor in his voice. 

"Keep it," Thomas replied as he made his way to the door. "And do try not to meet your demise in my absence, would you?" 

Victor caught a fleeting smirk on Thomas's lips. Was it a jest, or something more sinister? 

With Thomas's departure, Victor returned to his nightly ritual of cleaning. The rhythmic clinking of glasses and the soft swish of his polishing cloth offered a modicum of comfort amidst the growing unease. 

The creak of the saloon door broke his thoughts. Victor looked up, ready to tell the newcomer the place was closed for the night. His words died on his lips as he caught sight of the figure silhouetted in the doorway. 

The night seemed to thicken, pressing against the windows of the saloon like an inky tide. The figure stood motionless; a silhouette carved from the very darkness itself. As it moved closer, its steps unnaturally smooth, Victor felt a chill crawl up his spine. 

"I'm afraid the saloon is closed for the night. Perhaps you might return tomorrow," he said, his voice steady despite the growing unease in his gut. 

Cloaked in black from head to toe, the lady approached the bar with an eerie grace. From her gloved hand, she produced a heavy coin, its metal dull in the lamplight. "A few drinks, if you please," she murmured, a soft whisper. 

Victor hesitated, his instincts screaming with caution. Yet, bound by the unwritten laws of hospitality, he reached for a bottle. The clink of glass echoed softly as he poured, the sound unnervingly loud in the heavy silence. 

"Victor Montgomery Fairchild." 

His full name, spoken with such familiarity, chilled him to the core. In Sprocketville's history, such formal address often heralded ominous news—a summons to court, a challenge to honor, or a threat to life itself. It was a tradition as old as the town, a verbal challenge laid bare. 

Victor's hand shook as he poured, feigning calm while his mind raced. His keen eyes, despite the dim light, noted the lady's exposed skin—pale as moonlight on a winter's night, unnaturally radiant. 

The bottle slipped from his suddenly nerveless fingers, shattering on the floor in a spray of glass and liquor. As Victor bent to retrieve the pieces, senses alert to danger, he glimpsed movement from the corner of his eye. 

The lady lunged, her body arcing over the bar with supernatural speed. But Victor, seasoned by years in this rugged town, was ready. His hand closed around an unbroken bottle's neck, swinging it in a savage arc. 

The impact rang through his arm as glass met flesh. A shriek, more animal than human, pierced the air. Victor staggered back, his heart thundering against his ribs. 

The lady recoiled, her veil torn, revealing a face both beautiful and horrifying—eyes gleaming with unholy hunger, lips drawn back to reveal teeth far too sharp for any mortal mouth. 

"What manner of creature are you?" Victor gasped, his composure finally cracking in the face of this impossible horror. 

The thing that wore a woman's shape smiled, a predator's grin that promised pain and terror. "Oh, Victor," it purred, "I am the future of Sprocketville. And you, my dear, are about to become part of it." 

Victor's heart hammered in his chest as the vampirusa lunged. The spooky stories he'd read and the chilling warnings in "The Duality of Flesh" suddenly felt way too real. This wasn't just a book anymore. This was a fight for his life. 

With a surge of adrenaline, Victor managed to block the creature's initial assault, their struggle sending them crashing to the floor with a thunderous impact. Despite his efforts to restrain her, he felt a sharp, searing pain in his arm. 

Her teeth, unnaturally sharp and gleaming in the dim light, sank into his flesh with terrifying ease. The pain was excruciating, but far worse was the draining sensation that followed, as if his very life force were being siphoned away. In that horrifying moment, Victor understood the awful truth: Vampire. 

The word echoed in his mind, accompanied by vivid images from "The Duality of Flesh" that now plagued him with nightmarish clarity: dark rituals, blood pacts, undead shadows hunting for eternal life. The academic curiosity that had once drawn him to the book now tasted like bitter ashes in his mouth, a cruel joke played by fate itself. 

Victor's eyes met those of the vampire, her gaze holding an unholy mixture of ecstasy and insatiable hunger as she fed. Gritting his teeth against the searing agony, he summoned every ounce of strength left in his body. Muscles screamed in protest as he pressed his forearm against hers, fighting to break free from her iron grip. 

With a sickening rip of flesh, Victor wrenched his arm free. Blood—his own—dripped from the vampire's lips as she flashed a wicked smile. The wound on his arm throbbed, a torn, ragged mess that bore testament to the creature's savagery. 

Before Victor could retreat, the lady's hand shot out, cupping his face in a mockery of maternal affection. Her touch sent a jolt of revulsion through him, cold as the grave and just as final. 

"Such spirit," she purred, her voice thick with dark promise. "Oh, Victor, we shall have such delightful times together." 

Victor's bloodcurdling scream pierced the night as the lady's teeth sank into his neck. With a desperate surge of strength born of sheer terror, he slammed his elbow into her jaw. A bone-jarring crunch echoed through the saloon, but to his mounting horror, she merely shook off the blow, her eyes burning with inhuman hunger. 

"You'll need to try harder than that, my darling," she hissed, her voice dripping with malice and dark desire. 

Victor's mind raced, unable to comprehend how she could shrug off such a devastating hit. In that split second of hesitation, she lunged again, her teeth finding purchase in his shoulder. The pain was searing, like a white-hot brand scorching his very soul. 

As the vampire's teeth tore into his flesh, Victor's world narrowed to a pinpoint of agony and despair. With every passing heartbeat, he could feel his strength ebbing, his life force draining away into the monster's insatiable maw. 

But Victor Montgomery Fairchild was not a man to go quietly into that good night. With a guttural roar that seemed to shake the very foundations of the saloon, he summoned every last ounce of his fading strength. His hand, trembling but determined, groped blindly along the bar behind him. 

"You'll... not... have me," he gasped, each word a herculean effort against the encroaching darkness. 

His fingers closed around the neck of a bottle—whiskey or gin, he knew not which. With a savage twist of his body, ignoring the tearing agony in his shoulder, Victor brought the bottle crashing down upon the vampire's head. 

The sound of shattering glass pierced the air, mingling with an inhuman shriek of pain and fury. The creature's grip loosened for just a moment, but it was enough. Victor wrenched himself free, stumbling backward, his vision swimming in a sea of red. 

Blood—his lifeblood—stained the front of his shirt, spreading like a crimson flower blooming in the dim lamplight. The vampire stood before him, glass shards glittering in her pale flesh, her eyes burning with an unholy rage. 

"Fool," she hissed, her voice slithering through the air. "Do you honestly think you can escape your own destiny?"

Victor's back hit the wall, the cold, unyielding surface a stark reminder that there was nowhere left to run. His eyes darted frantically around the saloon, searching for anything—a weapon, an escape, a miracle. But the familiar confines of his establishment now seemed alien and hostile, offering no sanctuary from the horror before him. 

The vampire advanced, her movements liquid and predatory. A forked tongue flicked out, tasting the air, savoring the scent of Victor's fear and blood. 

"Your kindness has always fascinated me, Victor," she purred, her words a perverse caress. "So fragile, yet so determined to cling to your pitiful existence. It's almost... admirable." 

Victor's hand closed around the handle of a nearby chair. It was a flimsy defense against such a creature, but it was all he had. He raised it before him like a shield, his arms trembling with exhaustion and blood loss. 

"Stay back," he growled, his voice hoarse but defiant. "I'll not become one of your unholy broods." 

The vampire's laughter was like broken glass, sharp and cutting. "Oh, my dear Victor. Who said anything about turning you? No, I have... other plans for you." 

As she lunged forward once more, Victor swung the chair with all his might, a desperate gambit against the encroaching darkness. 

The chair connected with a sickening crunch, splintering against the vampire's alabaster skin. For a fleeting moment, Victor dared to hope - but his triumph was short-lived. The creature barely flinched, shards of wood clattering to the floor as she advanced relentlessly. 

"Pitiful," she sneered, her eyes gleaming with malevolent amusement. "Is this truly the best you can muster, Victor?" 

Panic clawed at Victor's throat as he stumbled backward, his feet tangling in the remnants of the shattered chair. He fell hard, his head striking the edge of a nearby table. Stars exploded behind his eyes, the world tilting sickeningly. 

Through the haze of pain and terror, Victor's hand brushed against something cool and metallic. The oil lamp. With trembling fingers, he grasped it, a desperate plan forming in his addled mind. 

The vampire loomed over him, her face a mask of cruel triumph. "It's time to embrace your fate, my dear," she cooed, reaching for him with taloned fingers. 

In that instant, Victor acted. With a strength born of sheer desperation, he hurled the lamp at the creature's face. Glass shattered, and kerosene sprayed across her pale visage. The vampire recoiled, more from surprise than pain, her inhuman eyes widening in shock. 

Victor scrambled to his feet, his hand diving into his pocket. The matchbox—always kept close for lighting patrons' cigars—now became his lifeline. With fumbling fingers, he struck a match against the rough strip. 

The tiny flame flickered to life, a beacon of hope in the suffocating darkness. 

"Burn in hell, you abomination," Victor snarled, flinging the lit match at the oil-soaked vampire. 

The effect was instantaneous and horrifying. Flames erupted across the creature's form, her unearthly screams piercing the night. The acrid stench of burning flesh filled the air as the vampire thrashed wildly, a living inferno in the heart of the saloon. 

Victor didn't wait to see more. His survival instinct kicked in, driving him towards the saloon's entrance. He stumbled, his vision blurring from blood loss and exhaustion, but pure adrenaline kept him moving. 

As he reached for the door handle, a flaming hand clamped down on his shoulder. The vampire, still ablaze, had lunged after him in a final, desperate attack. Victor could feel her inhuman strength, even as the flames consumed her. 

"If I die," she hissed, her voice a hellish rasp, "you'll join me in damnation!" 

Victor's world narrowed to a single, crystalline moment of terror and determination. With a roar that tore from the very depths of his being, he wrenched himself forward, feeling skin and cloth tear beneath the vampire's grip. 

The door burst open, and Victor tumbled out into the cool night air. Behind him, the saloon erupted in flames, the vampire's dying shrieks fading into the roar of the inferno. 

Gasping, bleeding, but alive, Victor staggered into the fog-shrouded street. The night air was thick and oppressive, each breath a struggle. His legs, weak and unsteady, carried him forward on pure instinct. 

As he lurched down a shadowy alleyway, he passed three men smoking. Their eyes narrowed as Victor stumbled by, clutching his wounded shoulder. He must have looked like a wounded animal, or perhaps one of the very monsters he'd just escaped. 

The cobblestones beneath his feet seemed to tilt and sway, his vision blurring at the edges. The coppery taste of blood filled his mouth, and he could feel the warmth of it seeping through his tattered shirt. 

A distant part of his mind registered the sound of shouting and the acrid smell of smoke. The saloon - his livelihood, his home - was surely nothing but ash and embers now. But the price had been worth it to rid the world of that unholy creature. 

Or had he? 

A chill that had nothing to do with the night air ran down Victor's spine. He hadn't seen the vampire's final demise with his own eyes. What if...? 

No. He couldn't entertain such thoughts. Not now. He had to find help, had to warn someone about the danger lurking in Sprocketville's shadows. 

As he stumbled out of the alley and onto a wider street, the fog seemed to part, revealing a familiar facade: Dr. Thaddeus Blackwood's residence and surgery. A faint light glimmered behind the curtained windows, a beacon of hope in the oppressive darkness. 

Victor lurched towards the door, his legs finally giving out as he reached the steps. He collapsed against the weathered wood, his fist weakly pounding against the panels. 

"Help," he croaked, his voice barely above a whisper. "Please... help..." 

The world tilted alarmingly, darkness creeping in at the edges of his vision. Victor fought against the encroaching unconsciousness, knowing that to succumb now might mean never waking again. 

Just as his strength was about to fail him entirely, the door creaked open. Dr. Blackwood's lined face, etched with concern, swam into view. 

"Good God, man! What's happened to you?" the doctor exclaimed, his eyes widening at the sight of Victor's bloodied form. 

Victor opened his mouth to respond, but no words came. Instead, a choked sob escaped his lips as the full weight of the night's horrors crashed down upon him. He pitched forward, the last of his strength deserting him. 

As consciousness slipped away, Victor felt strong arms catch him, preventing his fall. Dr. Blackwood's voice, urgent and muffled, called out for assistance. 

In the distance, bells began to toll - the fire brigade, no doubt, rushing to contain the inferno that had once been Victor's saloon. But beneath that familiar clangor, Victor's fading mind imagined he heard something else: a low, inhuman howl of fury and hunger. 

His last coherent thought before the darkness claimed him was a fervent prayer: Let it truly be over. Let that monster be nothing but ashes and bad memories. 

But even as oblivion took him, a part of Victor knew that his ordeal was far from finished. The vampire's words echoed in his mind, a chilling promise of horrors yet to come: 

"I am the future of Sprocketville. And you, my dear, are about to become part of it." 

Then, mercifully, Victor knew no more.