Katpride
Story Collector
Ireland. 1970s.
The storm hits just before midnight. The skies crack open, and the rain tumbles down all at once. It hits the earth like a slap, swamps the roads and turns all the dirt to mud near instantly.
The Hound knows an opportunity when they see it. They’ve been eying the sky for days, biding their time and holding their tongue, gathering all the slack their handlers are stupid enough to give them. The storm doesn’t disappoint. Rain pours down in sheets. The wind howls, whipping the water this way and that. Booming thunder splits the sky, flashing lightning chasing its heels, and the power flickers, once, twice, then gives up in a sudden rush.
A metal fist is removed from the breaker box, glowing bionic eyes the only light in a suddenly pitch-dark room. The Hellhound’s laughter is too soft to carry over the howling wind. The screams that follow are not.
Hours pass, and the storm doesn’t let up in the slightest. The radio yammers on about closing the roads, battening the hatches, staying indoors and out of cellars.
The Hound’s eyes flick to the rearview, to the smouldering building shrinking into the horizon behind them. They flip to a different station and step on the gas.
They ditch the car half a mile outside town, driving it off a cliff and jumping out at the last second just because they can. They watch it tumble down, smile growing with every crunch. Then they walk the rest of the way, hands shoved deep in the pockets of their leather jacket. They’re thoroughly drenched by the time they’re halfway there, and contemplating another cathartic round of murders when they finally reach the outskirts.
Luckily for the residents of this dingy little middle-of-nowhere town, the pub is still open, and The Hound is amenable to using less sanguine liquids to drown their sorrows. Sodden and shrouded, they push through the doors of the establishment and drip their way over the threshold. There are a handful of people already inside, and they give them all one cataloguing sweep before closing their eyes behind their mirrored shades, cutting off the faint red glow and relying on sound and memory to guide them to the bar.
They draw the attention of the bartender soon enough, being the only person currently at the bar rather than seated at one of the booths. He greets them, and they give him a short wave in answer, their mask of polite disinterest firmly in place.
“Whiskey. Mix it with somethin’ warm, yeah?” They order, and when he shuffles off they remain standing, hip propped on one of the barstools rather than taking a seat. The fingers of their non-metal hand drum along the countertop, but they go still when the bell above the door rings. Footsteps, approaching the bar - one set. They risk cracking their eyes open, peering through their lashes at the woman who strides up beside them.
They don’t recognize her. Some of the tension leaves their shoulders, and they release the handle of the knife in their pocket. They crack a smile, let their shoulders drop further as they turn slightly towards her, commiserating. Casual. “Hell of a storm out there.”
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