Eyes
The violet always got me. It was the only color that mattered on my street. I stood here, wiping down the same sticky counter in the grim little café where I worked, watching the apartment building across the asphalt. Everyone else saw a freak; I saw the anomaly, the perfect, unnerving, blinding shade of purple in her irises. It was a hue no human eye should hold, so bright it felt less like a natural feature and more like a carefully crafted gemstone—or maybe a warning flare.
I was a creep, a self-aware weirdo, fixated on the only person in this dead-end town who radiated genuine mystery. People crossed the street to avoid her, clutching their purses and whispering about the dangerous girl in Apartment 4B. They were scared. I wasn't. I was mesmerized. Boredom had been the currency of my life until she showed up, and now, my routine—the daily cleanup, the bitter coffee, the double shifts—was merely a frame for my sole obsession: watching her. She moved with an elegant defiance, armored in a coat that seemed too expensive for this neighborhood, the kind of woman who was clearly nobody's friend and didn't want to be. I watched her until the moment she disappeared down the block, taking the only interesting color with her.
I was contemplating whether today would finally be the day I got up the nerve to speak to her—a ridiculous, suicidal idea—when the noise came.
It wasn't a yell or a car crash. It was a metallic shriek of pain followed by the sickening sound of wet, heavy impact.
Two figures had her pinned against a dented, parked sedan near the corner. She was fighting, kicking, a silent, furious blur of motion against their dark bulk. They were too large for casual thugs, and they moved with an inhuman speed that made the air around them seem to ripple.
I didn’t think. I didn't reach for a phone or call the police. That purple, that impossible color, was in trouble. I kicked the cafe door open and bolted across the street, my adrenaline spiking with a rush I hadn't felt in years. This wasn't my business, it was a death wish, but the sight of those monstrous forms assaulting the only beautiful thing in my life was a trigger. I wasn't going to stand by and watch.
I got close enough to see the mistake: they weren’t men. They were something with teeth, with skin that looked too thick and rigid, and with eyes that glowed a flat, hateful malicious red. I managed one desperate, useless shove on the nearest attacker's back. He didn't turn around. His arm simply moved backward with a sickening, effortless speed.
He didn't so much punch me as swat, like I was a fly disturbing his dinner. I felt the air leave my lungs in a burning gasp as my body sailed across the asphalt and slammed into the brick wall of the café. The impact was deafening; I saw white, then black, then the sickening realization that my shoulder might be dust.
The girl stopped fighting. The movement, the panic, all vanished. She looked right at me, and her purple eyes were suddenly radiant, terrifying and beautiful, wet with tears. The purple was glowing. As I tried to climb back to my feet, my muscles screaming in protest, she shook her head—a single, frantic no. It was a warning, a plea to stand down, and it hit me harder than the wall. She was protecting me. Then, she let them shove her into the back of the black sedan. The car peeled out, leaving nothing but tire smoke and the lingering metallic stench of ozone.
I lay on the ground, spitting grit and blood. I knew two things: I was curious before; now I was obsessed. And the creatures who took her knew my face, my location, and my foolish need to interfere. My normal life was over.
Most people would call the police, scream, or pack a bag. I just dragged my sore body back inside. I was breathing dust, my ribs on fire, and I cleaned the blood off the splintered door and the pavement with a pounding need to know: Who are they? Who is she? I finished my closing duties in a cautious, shaky haze. The whole time, I was scanning the shadows behind every dumpster, every parked car, the cheap plastic blinds drawn tight. Every distant headlight was a red eye, and every siren was a sound of inevitable doom. I knew what I had seen wasn't human, and I knew creatures like that don't allow witnesses.
I took the long way home, convinced I was being tracked. I didn't just check the locks once; I triple-checked the deadbolt, the chain, and the flimsy window latches. It was useless, I knew, but it was the only small defense I had left against a world that had suddenly decided I was fair game.
I was on the couch, halfway through my cold takeout, nursing a glass of cheap whiskey, when I heard the scratch outside. A low, deliberate scrape of a claw on concrete, too close. I froze, my fork clattering on the plate.
I was already at the window, adrenaline buzzing in my ears, when the light hit them. Not a full figure, just the flash: two pairs of glowing red eyes staring back at me from the shadows of my tiny porch.
I didn't have time to react. I heard the door splinter, the frame shattering inward with a deafening crack. They were in my living room. They were faster and quieter than any animal, and in that instant, curiosity was finally overwhelmed by pure, gut-wrenching fear. I was going to die, and I finally understood why everyone else had crossed the street. They grabbed me, and the world was a blur of motion, speed, and darkness.
The vehicle stopped with a lurch. I was dragged out of the back, my body a useless weight. I blinked against the dark, my vision swimming, expecting a boss, a shadowy figure, someone terrifying—perhaps the master vampire I suspected they might be.
Instead, a man stood before me. He was impeccably dressed, handsome, and completely unremarkable—except for his eyes.
They were the same exact, impossible, terrifying violet purple as the girl I watched. And he looked at me not with hostility, but with an intense, weary scrutiny.
