
Konrad's eyes slowly opened. Three-fourths of his body lay buried in the demp soil. All around him unfolded a sprawling patch of woodland, devoid of any presence save for a scarce few animals that inhabited it.
The trees lashed and crashed against each other like drum sticks in the hands of a giant. Their trunks rose as far as Konrad's supernaturally potent eyes could see, and their groves blotted out the sun, protecting him from its harmful effects.
Light and shadow danced across his upturned face. His ears picked up on the buzzing of insects and the subtle crunching of dry leaves.
Suddenly, Konrad's lips curled up, and he could've sworn that something had darted past his head. He turned to look for the intruder and was met face to-face with a juvenile rat.
Its bedy, shiny eyes bore into his like a pair of polished onyx stones. He remembered seeing rodents feasting on carcasses and even a handful of bold ones going after living creatures. They preyed on the weak and the disabled, even children at times, gnawing off bits and pieces of meat from the face, hands, and feet. But Konrad would allow no lowly rodent to defile the sanctity of his body. Konrad snarled, showing his conical, jagged chompers.
The small rodent paused momentarily, wiggled its nose and ran off in the opposite direction, with its tail trailing behind it like a fleshy ribbon.
Slowly, Konrad disenterred himself from the soil's loving embrace. In doing so, he pulled on a number of larger roots that intertwined to form an elaborate web of life. These roots spread through the ground like veins, pulsing with imperceptible life. They extended deep into the cozy darkness, but even they were no match for a vampire's unnatural strength.
Konrad tore through them with his torso as he stood up and shook off clumps of dirt that stubbornly clung to his apparel.
He laid his hand on one of the boles and briefly experienced the surreal vitality flowing through it. It was an old tree, whose trunk easily matched the width of his shoulders. He was tempted to call it primeval, for it was undoubtedly older than he. Konrad's fingers, each crowned by a single, blackened claw, raked grooves in the bark, but the tree hardly reacted. Even Konrad could not perceive its suffering, if any was to be found.
There was indeed a power exuded by the forest which only the most discerning creatures could feel, and this lone tree was a testament to it.
He looked off into the distance, but the trees were so dense in their arrangement that he struggled to make out the world beyond them. It was as if they were determined to let sunlight sully the labyrinth that was the forest floor with no more than a few rays.

Last edited: