John Rexhep is his name, and taking blood is his game. In the human world he has no fame; in his father's world he bears all shame -- to be born half-human is to be born a most useful tool, and something easy to discard, dispatch, when all usage has been had.
Asphalt carved an aching valley through dark oak, firs, and kudzu. Two unerringly straight miles of this black path connected a small town and the hospital on the far side of one small city or another; lights from the latter ate into the stars. It was a moonlit night.
A low, growling roar like a dragon's flaming breath left on repeat, and the red-orange glow to match.
A machine, all organic, surged from the dark distance on wheels of callused scales. There was no air in these tires. All the air in this bike flowed through its engine, gasps herded in labored circular breathing to keep the dragonflame alive and give its rider a literal hot seat. From that flame, a glow in the eyes of a deer skull showed the way; and in place of antlers, two bone-obsidian-steel grips, a linear handlebar in total black-out like his outfit.
The rest of the bike was meaty flesh on an esoteric bone structure matching nothing alive -- besides others of its kind -- but the rider couldn't be mistaken for anything but human. Urged by wind, his tar-black trench coat tugged on his shoulders. Over 100 mph with his lax wide-armed grip, that snakeskin alone should've pulled him off his meat-chopper. Yet it failed. He stayed upright and motionless.
He was taller than a door, wider than a doorframe at the shoulders, and longer than a doorknob more stalwart than any security door you could measure. With his gaunt face, from perfect cheekbones to scoop jawline, foretelling trouble underneath the brim of a gravedigger's hat, he stared on, alert.
An ordinary human family swerved to avoid him, because he was cruising along the yellow line haphazardly. In their bewilderment -- or maybe the sleep deprivation that hits hardest on that species so inferior as homo sapiens -- they did not notice the five blood vials and charm box at his hips or the weaponry lining his belt, mostly a pair of guns esoteric and a pair seeming mundane, respectively sable-dark and silvered. Two more hilts looked as if they might belong to swords; no blades sheathed or unsheathed prodded the coat's lining from inside. They and the stranger guns had hoses attached. Like props in a scifi B-movie.
He could see the lights of the city now. Half a mile away, he guessed.
He lifted his foot off the accelerator. Literal pipe organs that spiraled into the back wheel's hubs detached and spat steam in a conjoined plume he left behind, bigger than a car. The blast was deafening. The chopper's flank deflated visibly, like the human torso after a haggard sigh.
All that steam, hot enough to poach eggs of larger birds, had been rotating the wheel as it would in any steam engine mechanical, metal. Now he needed to lay low. Any guards, bewildered as they may be, would be remiss to miss a living motorcycle or its rider attempting to blaze a path into the blood bank. Stealth called to him, as it did any predator.
As he decelerated one mile-per-hour per second, he observed his still-wild surroundings. Any predator, calm as it may be, would be remiss to miss a living being skirt on by undetected. Stealth called to all things of beating hearts.